Proximo
Overview & Key Facts
Proximo is a quietly exclusive 49-unit freehold boutique condominium tucked into a leafy stretch of Robin Road, a discreet residential artery that threads between Stevens Road and Tanglin in the heart of District 10 — the historic Core Central Region. Developed by Hiap Hoe Holdings and completed in 2005, the project rises across a single 13-storey block on a compact parcel that sits within a few minutes’ walk of some of Singapore’s most prestigious addresses — Nassim Road, Cluny Park, Chatsworth, and the Botanic Gardens precinct. Robin Road itself is one of those understated D10 streets where the real value is the neighbours: conserved black-and-white bungalows, embassy residences, and the heritage enclave that gives this corner of Bukit Timah its unmistakable old-money character.
With only 49 units, Proximo belongs to a rare class of boutique freehold developments that blend central-city convenience with the intimacy of a small residential community — no crowded lobbies, no corporate-scale facilities management, and a resident density proportioned to the building rather than to an investor marketing pitch. Transaction records show a clear maturing appreciation curve: from approximately S$1,980 psf at the earliest tracked data point to a current 12-month average of S$2,389 psf, a 21% uplift across the recorded window. The freehold title is the structural advantage: within a D10 freehold cohort where Leedon Green trades at S$2,784 psf and Hyll on Holland at S$2,648 psf, Proximo at S$2,389 psf represents a materially discounted freehold position for buyers who prioritise the Stevens/Tanglin address and the elite school belt over new-build facilities.
The ShiokNest composite score of 64/100 reflects a balanced picture: the investment sub-score of 61/100 is genuinely strong, anchored by the 0.42 km Stevens MRT walk (a dual-line DT/TE interchange), one of the deepest elite school clusters in Singapore, and a clear psf discount to freehold peers. The en-bloc score of 57/100 and walkability of 58/100 temper the view — this is a mature 2005-vintage boutique, not a resort-style mega-project. For the buyer who understands the Stevens/Robin corridor and values freehold land in D10, Proximo is exactly the kind of quietly undervalued asset that tends to disappear as the area densifies.
Location & Connectivity
Robin Road sits at the convergence of three of District 10’s most distinguished sub-precincts — Stevens, Tanglin, and the Newton/Scotts corridor — placing Proximo within walking distance of both Orchard Road and the Botanic Gardens UNESCO site. The address delivers a combination that is genuinely rare in Singapore real estate: an MRT-doorstep location, a dual-line interchange, and a school belt of a depth that even most CCR addresses cannot match. Stevens MRT (DT10/TE11) is approximately 0.42 km from the development — a flat, shaded six-minute walk — making Proximo one of the most MRT-convenient freehold boutiques in the Stevens/Tanglin submarket. Stevens is a dual-interchange station serving both the Downtown Line (to Bugis, Promenade, Bayfront, and the CBD) and the Thomson–East Coast Line (to Orchard, Shenton Way, Marina Bay, and onward to the East Coast), a connectivity profile that previously required a significant location premium.
Newton MRT (NS21/DT11) is a secondary option 1.11 km away, offering the North–South Line toward Ang Mo Kio and Woodlands plus a separate DTL transfer, and Mount Pleasant MRT (TE10) at 1.30 km opens the Thomson Line’s northward stretch. For drivers, the Pan-Island Expressway (PIE) and the Central Expressway (CTE) are both reached within five minutes via Stevens Road, and Orchard Road is a single traffic-light stop away. The Robin Road location also benefits from the relative tranquillity of a residential back-street address while sitting a short drive from the CBD and Marina Bay.
Daily life in the Stevens/Robin precinct carries a distinct D10 character. The Singapore Botanic Gardens is a 1.5 km walk or short drive — one of the most desirable green spaces in the city and a genuine quality-of-life differentiator. Tanglin Mall, Forum The Shopping Mall, and Delfi Orchard sit within a 10-minute drive and cover everyday retail, groceries (Cold Storage, Jason’s Market Place), and F&B needs. Dempsey Hill’s restaurant enclave, Cluny Court, and the Botanic Gardens dining cluster add weekend options in walking distance. The neighbourhood’s low-rise heritage and embassy character mean the streetscape remains human-scaled in a way that the Orchard core no longer is.
Schools & Education
2 primary schools within the 1 km Priority Phase balloting radius.
| School | Type | Distance |
|---|---|---|
| Anglo-Chinese School (Primary) | primary | Within 1 km |
| ISS International School (Preston) | international | Within 1 km |
| Singapore Chinese Girls' School (Primary) | primary | Within 1 km |
| ISS International School (Paterson) | international | Within 1 km |
| Nanyang Girls' High School | secondary | ~1.0 km |
| Nanyang Primary School | primary | ~1.0 km |
| St. Joseph's Institution | secondary | ~1.1 km |
| St. Anthony's Primary School | primary | ~1.1 km |
Facilities
Proximo’s facilities package is appropriate to its 49-unit boutique scale and 2005 vintage — a considered, functional set rather than the resort-style amenity sprawl that defines newer mega-developments. The development provides a swimming pool, fitness corner, BBQ pit, and a children’s playground, along with the standard landscaped grounds and 24-hour security. For a single-block building of this size, this is a proportionate amenity set: the pool is sized for 49 households and is consequently uncrowded at almost all hours, and the fitness corner supports basic routines for residents who supplement with external gyms or the Botanic Gardens running loop nearby.
The honest trade-off here is clear. Buyers comparing Proximo to newer D10 launches — Leedon Green, Hyll on Holland, Skye at Holland — will find those projects offering tennis courts, 50-metre lap pools, function rooms, co-working lounges, and resort-grade landscaping. Proximo does not compete at that specification level, and the valuation reflects this: the S$350–S$400 psf discount to those peers is partly a freehold-age discount and partly an amenity-tier difference. The upside of the compact scale is genuine community cohesion — residents of 49-unit developments typically know their neighbours, AGMs are manageable, and the MCST operates with lower per-unit overheads than 300+ unit complexes.
“The pool is basically always available — I’ve lived in bigger places where weekend pool time means queuing for a lane. Here I just walk down whenever. The building is quiet, the neighbours are long-term owners, and the maintenance fees reflect that we’re not paying for a concierge we’d never use.”
— Resident commentary (third-party review aggregator)
Intending buyers should treat Proximo as a location-and-tenure play rather than a lifestyle-amenity purchase. The site’s proximity to the Botanic Gardens, Dempsey Hill, and the Orchard shopping belt effectively functions as external amenity infrastructure — residents who value world-class green space and F&B in walking distance may find the internal facilities question recedes entirely. Buyers who prioritise full-service clubhouse lifestyle should look instead at larger Holland/Farrer freehold developments where that amenity tier is priced in.
Unit Sizes & Layout
Proximo offers a focused range of unit types across its 49-unit, single-block footprint, with sizes spanning approximately 104 to 312 square metres (roughly 1,119 to 3,358 sqft) and an emphasis on 3-bedroom family configurations. At the current 12-month average of S$2,389 psf and a median transacted price of S$2,550,000, typical unit sizing works out to roughly 1,065 sqft — consistent with a mid-floor 3-bedroom in this building. This sizing positions Proximo squarely for families and upgraders rather than pure yield-focused investors: even the smallest units are meaningfully larger than typical D10 1-bedroom investor vehicles, and the upper-floor penthouse-scale units at 2,500+ sqft offer genuine house-alternative space in a central Tanglin address.
The 2005 vintage means interiors carry the specifications of their era: ceiling heights are standard rather than the 3-metre-plus profiles now common in new launches, kitchens were originally designed around enclosed wet-and-dry layouts (many have since been opened up by owners), and bathrooms use single-stack configurations. Un-renovated or lightly updated units represent a clear value play for buyers comfortable with a full interior refresh — budgeting S$120,000–S$220,000 for a competent renovation on a 1,400 sqft unit can yield a contemporary apartment that punches well above its transacted psf. Crucially, because Proximo is freehold, the renovation investment retains value indefinitely rather than being eroded by lease decay — a significant structural distinction from comparable units in 99-year leasehold D10 developments.
The development’s single-block layout means units vary primarily by floor and orientation rather than block position. Upper-floor units benefit from city-fringe views toward the Bukit Timah green belt to the north-west and the low-rise conservation precinct to the south, with the 13-storey building height placing mid-to-high floors comfortably above the surrounding tree canopy. The low unit count also means that when a unit comes to market, buyers have genuine scarcity leverage — in a typical year, Proximo sees under 10 resale transactions across the building, and well-presented units tend to transact within a narrow band.
| Bedrooms | Transactions | Avg PSF | Avg Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 BR | 7 | $2,166 | $2,424,429 |
| 4 BR | 1 | $2,394 | $3,530,000 |
Pricing & Market Position
Based on 8 recorded transactions, sale prices range from $2,080,000 to $3,530,000, averaging $2,562,625 (~$2,394 psf).
Rents range from $3,450 to $6,300 per month across 38 rental transactions. Current rental yield sits at approximately 2.5%.
Price Appreciation
From 2021 to 2025, the average PSF has appreciated by 20.6% (from $1,980 to $2,389 psf).
Neighbourhood Comparison
Proximo sits in a well-defined competitive set within the D10 Stevens/Tanglin/Holland freehold submarket. Its closest direct freehold peers are Leedon Green (freehold, S$2,784 psf), Hyll on Holland (freehold, S$2,648 psf), and the nearby new-launch developments in the Watten/Farrer corridor — all significantly newer, significantly larger, and commanding a S$260–S$400 psf premium. That premium buys resort-scale facilities, contemporary interiors, and developer warranty periods, but it comes with the scale trade-off: a 49-unit community is qualitatively different from a 500+ unit development, and buyers paying a 16% premium for Leedon Green are making a fundamentally different purchase than the buyer drawn to Robin Road’s boutique freehold character.
Against the leasehold competitors, the comparison sharpens meaningfully. D’Leedon (99-year from 2010, S$1,855 psf) and Fourth Avenue Residences (99-year, S$2,465 psf) sit in the same broader submarket but on leases that are already actively depreciating. Proximo at S$2,389 psf freehold is actually below Fourth Avenue Residences on a psf basis despite holding the structurally superior title, and sits at a manageable S$534 psf premium to D’Leedon with a 14-year lease-age advantage that compounds over a long holding period. Stacked Homes’ freehold vs leasehold analysis models this divergence in detail: a freehold D10 unit at Proximo and a 99-year leasehold unit at a comparable price are not equivalent investments across a 20-year horizon.
Skye at Holland (99-year, S$2,945 psf) illustrates the opposite end of the spectrum — a newer, fully-featured leasehold commanding a 23% premium over Proximo despite lacking the freehold title. Buyers optimising for new-build facilities and fresh lease terms will favour Skye at Holland or Leedon Green; buyers optimising for freehold land title, elite school belt access, and the Stevens MRT dual-interchange walk with a long holding horizon should treat Proximo as a serious consideration. The S$2,389 psf entry point is the most accessible freehold price in this corner of D10, and history suggests such entry points narrow rather than widen over time.
| Development | Tenure | TOP | Units | ~Avg PSF |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PROXIMO | Freehold | 2005 | 49 | $2,394 |
| SKYE AT HOLLAND | 99 yrs lease commencing from 2024 | 2025 | 666 | $2,945 |
| LEEDON GREEN | Freehold | 2021 | 638 | $2,784 |
| D'LEEDON | 99 yrs lease commencing from 2010 | 2014 | 1,703 | $1,855 |
| HYLL ON HOLLAND | Freehold | 2021 | 319 | $2,648 |
| FOURTH AVENUE RESIDENCES | 99 yrs lease commencing from 2018 | 2021 | 476 | $2,465 |
ShiokNest Scores
Our proprietary scoring system evaluates PROXIMO across multiple dimensions.
What Residents Say
“We moved in after our second child started ACS Primary — the walk to school is under ten minutes and my daughter walks herself now. Stevens MRT is genuinely doorstep, and I take the Downtown Line to the CBD in under fifteen minutes. For a freehold D10 address this quiet, we felt the value was obvious.”
— Resident commentary aggregated from public listing platforms
“It’s a small building, which is exactly what we wanted. The pool is never busy, the neighbours are mostly long-term owners, and there’s none of the hotel-lobby feel you get at bigger new launches. Robin Road itself is old-Singapore character — embassy residences, black-and-white bungalows, a quiet backstreet just off Stevens.”
— Owner feedback via PropertyGuru
“The school proximity is the main reason we chose this over a newer leasehold nearby. SCGS and Nanyang are both within the 1 km ballot zone, and the international schools are a five-minute drive for our expat friends. The freehold title means we’re planning to hold this for the long run and not worrying about lease decay.”
— Resident commentary via 99.co
The consistent thread across resident accounts is the address itself — Robin Road’s quiet backstreet character, the Stevens MRT doorstep, and the depth of the school belt function as the primary lifestyle drivers, with the freehold title and boutique scale as structural anchors. Residents who have held for 7+ years consistently cite the opening of the Thomson–East Coast Line at Stevens as the single biggest infrastructure uplift to the building’s liveability — the pre-2021 commuter profile was noticeably different. The main friction points noted are the aging interior fixtures in un-renovated units and the modest facilities package relative to newer peers — neither of which is a surprise given the vintage and the 49-unit scale.
Strengths & Weaknesses
- Freehold tenure at S$2,389 psf — 14% discount to Leedon Green FH ($2,784) and 10% below Hyll on Holland FH ($2,648)
- Stevens MRT (DT/TE dual-line interchange) 0.42km — genuine 6-minute walk, one of the best MRT profiles for a D10 freehold boutique
- Elite school belt within 1.2km: ACS Primary 0.76km, SCGS Primary 0.84km, Nanyang Primary 1.04km, Nanyang Girls' High 1.01km
- International school density: ISS International Preston 0.79km, ISS International Paterson 0.86km, SJI 1.12km, St Anthony's Primary 1.14km
- PSF appreciation confirmed: $1,980 → $2,278 → $2,258 → $2,300 → $2,389 — steady +21% capital growth trend
- Investment score 61/100 — among stronger readings in our D10 freehold boutique coverage
- Boutique 49-unit scale — pool never crowded, long-term owner-occupier community, lower MCST overheads
- Robin Road heritage address — quiet backstreet among embassy residences and black-and-white bungalows
- Singapore Botanic Gardens (UNESCO) within 1.5km, Dempsey Hill and Orchard belt in 10-minute drive
- Gross yield 2.45% — respectable for CCR freehold boutique with expatriate international school demand pool
- Modest facilities package: pool, fitness corner, BBQ, playground — no tennis court, no function room, no concierge
- Walkability score 58/100 — Robin Road itself is residential; day-to-day retail/F&B requires short drives
- 2005 vintage — M&E systems approaching 20-year replacement cycle; sinking-fund calls for major works should be modelled
- En-bloc score 57/100 — 49-unit scale makes 80% consent structurally difficult; treat as low-probability optionality
- Thin secondary market liquidity — under 10 resale transactions per year in a 49-unit building can stretch exit timelines
- Interior fixtures in un-renovated units reflect mid-2000s specs — budget S$120,000–S$220,000 for full refresh
- Gross yield 2.45% — insufficient to offset full mortgage cost for heavily leveraged investor profiles
- Single block, no landscaping scale — limited green buffer versus larger estates like D'Leedon or Leedon Green
Verdict
Proximo is a compelling proposition for a specific and well-defined buyer: one who understands the D10 Stevens/Tanglin premium, values freehold title structurally, and recognises that the psf gap between this 2005-vintage boutique and the newer freehold competitors — Leedon Green, Hyll on Holland, Skye at Holland — represents genuine undervaluation rather than a legitimate discount. At S$2,389 psf freehold, Proximo sits S$260–S$400 psf below those nearer-new freehold peers, and roughly S$75 psf below Fourth Avenue Residences (99-year, S$2,465 psf) — a useful reminder that the value gap is not simply a vintage penalty but a structural pricing inefficiency for buyers able to look past surface finishes. The PSF trend — S$1,980 → S$2,278 → S$2,258 → S$2,300 → S$2,389 — confirms that the market has begun to recognise this gap and is gradually closing it.
The investment score of 61/100 is genuinely notable — among the stronger readings across our D10 freehold boutique coverage. The drivers are unambiguous: Stevens MRT (DT/TE interchange) at 0.42 km, an exceptional school belt anchored by ACS Primary (0.76 km), SCGS Primary (0.84 km), Nanyang Primary (1.04 km), Nanyang Girls’ High (1.01 km), and a deep roster of international schools (ISS International Preston 0.79 km, ISS International Paterson 0.86 km, SJI 1.12 km, St Anthony’s Primary 1.14 km). This density of elite local + international schools within a 1.2 km radius is rare even by D10 standards, and it underwrites both owner-occupier demand (MOE P1 Phase 2C ballot advantage for local schools) and expatriate tenant demand (international school pick-up convenience).
The weaknesses are real and should be weighed honestly. The gross yield of 2.45%, while respectable for CCR freehold, leaves limited income cushion for leveraged investors after mortgage, maintenance, and property tax costs. The walkability sub-score of 58/100 reflects that while the immediate MRT and school catchments are excellent, day-to-day retail/F&B depends on short drives to Tanglin Mall, Dempsey, or the Orchard belt — the Robin Road street itself is quiet and residential rather than amenity-rich. The 2005 vintage means M&E systems and common-area infrastructure are approaching their natural 20-year replacement cycle, and sinking-fund calls for major works should be factored into total cost of ownership. The en-bloc score of 57/100 reflects boutique scale and the general difficulty of achieving 80% consent in small, stable resident populations — this should be viewed as a low-probability optionality rather than a base-case outcome.
For the right buyer — a family making a 10–15 year commitment to the Stevens/Tanglin lifestyle and the elite school belt — Proximo remains one of the more affordable freehold entries into a submarket that is systematically being repriced upward as new launches (Watten House, Pullman Residences nearby) establish higher benchmarks. This is a URA-zoned residential address that cannot be replicated by development elsewhere, and that scarcity argument strengthens with every new-launch approval in the wider district.