The Post

D7 (CCR)
Avg PSF (12-month)
Rental yield
7 Total units
Category Ratings
Facilities
5.0
Unit size & layout
8.5
Value for money
7.5
Neighbourhood
9.5
MRT accessibility
8.5
Lease remaining
7.5

Overview & Key Facts

The Post is a seven-unit conservation development on Purvis Street in District 7 — one of the most historically and geographically privileged addresses in Singapore. The street sits within the Beach Road Conservation Area, a URA-designated zone of two- to six-storey pre-war shophouses that has resisted the large-scale redevelopment that transformed the surrounding CBD. To live here is to occupy a building that predates most of Singapore’s modern skyline — while standing at the geographic centre of it.

The property data is exceptional in a literal sense: extraordinary, and thin. With zero resale caveats and just two rental contracts on record — S$42,500/month (September 2022) and S$43,000/month (September 2024), both for units exceeding 3,000 square feet — The Post occupies a market tier that has almost no comparable precedent in Singapore’s residential property database. These are not data anomalies. The URA records reflect genuine large-format luxury floor-through units at approximately S$13–14 per square foot per month, a figure consistent with ultra-premium conservation tenancies at City Hall addresses. What they are not is representative of typical residential leasing. No bedroom classification is recorded because these units may be occupied on a whole-floor or whole-building basis — the distinction between “residential” and “managed serviced accommodation” is deliberately blurred at this price point and building type.

The surrounding D7 leasehold benchmark tells its own story. South Beach Residences trades at S$3,689 psf (99yr), Midtown Bay at S$3,220 psf (99yr), Midtown Modern at S$2,837 psf (99yr). The Post has no psf anchor to compare against — it has never transacted on the open resale market. That absence of a price record is, paradoxically, part of what this building represents: an asset whose owners do not sell.

Developer
Tenure
Total units
7
TOP year
District
7 — RCR
Street
PURVIS STREET

Location & Connectivity

Purvis Street is a short heritage lane running between St Andrew’s Road and Bras Basah Road, in the civic heart of Singapore. Named after John Purvis, a merchant appointed magistrate by Sir Stamford Raffles in 1823, the street formed part of the historic Hainanese enclave — locally known as “Hainan Second Street” alongside Middle Road and Seah Street. The buildings that line it today are primarily two- to four-storey pre-war conservation shophouses, housing a curated mix of restaurants, cocktail bars, and boutique offices behind facades preserved under the URA’s Beach Road Conservation guidelines.

MRT connectivity at The Post is, by any Singapore standard, exceptional. Esplanade MRT (Circle Line) is 350 metres away — a four-minute level walk through the conservation streetscape. Bugis MRT (East-West and Downtown Lines) is 470 metres distant, providing direct service to Changi Airport (EWL) and the Marina Bay financial cluster (DTL). Bras Basah MRT (Circle Line) at 490 metres adds a second CC option, and City Hall MRT (North-South and East-West Lines interchange) at 520 metres gives residents direct access to Orchard Road and the entire NSL. Few Singapore addresses can claim four MRT stations — on five separate lines — within 520 metres. Residents of The Post are effectively equidistant from the country’s two most important commercial nodes: the Orchard Road retail corridor and the Marina Bay financial district.

Five MRT lines within 520 metres
Esplanade CC (350m), Bugis EW/DT (470m), Bras Basah CC (490m), City Hall NS/EW (520m). No other private residential address in Singapore achieves five-line MRT coverage within half a kilometre. For households that commute to Changi, the CBD, Orchard, or the North, this connectivity eliminates the car as a transport necessity.

The institutional fabric within walking distance reinforces the address’s unique character. School of the Arts (SOTA) is 280 metres away. Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts (NAFA) is at 360 metres. Singapore Management University (SMU) sits 590 metres south. LASALLE College of the Arts is 1.11 km away. The concentration of Singapore’s premier creative and higher-education institutions within a ten-minute walk is not incidental — it reflects the decades-long civic investment in the Bras Basah-Bugis arts district that has transformed this corridor from a light-industrial heritage precinct into one of the most intellectually and culturally dense residential catchments in Southeast Asia.

Day-to-day retail is anchored by Raffles City (600 metres), Bugis Junction (700 metres), and the Bugis Street market (650 metres). The F&B strip on Purvis Street itself — including the long-established Chin Chin Eating House and Sin Swee Kee Chicken Rice — provides hawker-quality dining at the doorstep. Marina Bay Sands and the waterfront promenade are under 1.5 km on foot.


Schools & Education

Nearby Schools
SchoolTypeDistance
School of the ArtsjcWithin 1 km
Nanyang Academy of Fine ArtstertiaryWithin 1 km
Singapore Management UniversitytertiaryWithin 1 km
LASALLE College of the Artstertiary~1.1 km
St. Andrew's Junior Schoolprimary~1.3 km
St. Andrew's Secondary Schoolsecondary~1.3 km
St. Andrew's Junior Collegejc~1.3 km
ACS (Junior)primary~1.7 km

Facilities

Conservation shophouse-type developments do not offer the resort-style amenity stacks of modern condominiums. The Post has no swimming pool, gymnasium, clubhouse, guard post, or formal landscaped recreation grounds. This is structurally inherent to the building type: a URA-conserved multi-storey shophouse block on a narrow heritage plot cannot accommodate a 50-metre lap pool or tennis court, and the conservation guidelines that protect the building’s heritage character would prohibit the demolition or external modification that pool installation would require.

What the building may offer — and what conservation shophouse conversions at this price tier typically provide — are very different amenities: exceptionally high ceiling volumes (frequently 3.5–4.5 metres in heritage upper floors), wide original timber floorboards, full-floor private layouts that provide internal room for home-office and entertainment functions that modern apartments cannot match, and the architectural intimacy of a seven-unit building where residents share a stairwell, not a lobby with 500 neighbours. At S$43,000/month for a 3,000+ sqft floor, the unit itself is the amenity.

“Heritage shophouse conversions at this price level don’t sell on facilities — they sell on the impossibility of replication. No developer can build a new 1920s conservation building in the civic district. You cannot manufacture what history has already made.”

— Common framing among Singapore conservation property specialists via Stacked Homes editorial coverage of heritage residential conversions

Maintenance costs for a seven-unit conservation block are structurally lower than at large-format condominiums: S$150–300 per month versus S$400–800+ at facility-heavy developments. The saving is genuine, though it should be evaluated alongside the higher renovation and upkeep costs inherent to heritage buildings — conservation-grade timber floors, plaster ceilings, heritage facade elements, and antique ironwork require specialist maintenance that modern finishes do not. Prospective occupants should budget for this ongoing upkeep as a cost of the conservation experience.

No conventional condo facilities — a deliberate characteristic
The Post has no pool, gym, clubhouse, or guard post. Buyers and tenants who require these amenities should evaluate South Beach Residences (190 units, 99yr, full facilities, approximately 650m away) or Midtown Modern (558 units, 99yr, full facilities, approximately 900m away). The Post is for occupants who value architectural heritage, floor space, and locational exclusivity over facility provision.

Neighbourhood Comparison

The Post is most usefully compared against three categories: other D7 residential properties, other conservation shophouse residential assets in Singapore, and the City Hall neighbourhood’s serviced apartment stock.

Against D7’s leasehold new-build cohort — South Beach Residences (S$3,689 psf, 99yr/2007, 190 units), Midtown Bay (S$3,220 psf, 99yr/2018, 219 units), Midtown Modern (S$2,837 psf, 99yr/2019, 558 units), The M (S$2,755 psf, 99yr/2019, 522 units), Duo Residences (S$2,203 psf, 99yr/2011, 660 units) — The Post occupies a category that these developments simply cannot enter. They trade on modern finishes, facilities, and leasehold land. The Post, if it ever traded, would be priced on conservation heritage, architectural irreplaceability, and probable 999-year or freehold tenure. The psf comparison is structurally meaningless because the products are not substitutes.

Against the broader Singapore conservation shophouse residential tier, the nearest comparables are the strata-titled shophouse conversions in Duxton Hill, Club Street, and Ann Siang Hill in D2, and the Emerald Hill conservation houses in D9. The Purvis Street location offers superior MRT connectivity (five lines vs. two or three at most Duxton/Emerald Hill addresses) and the specific prestige of the civic district versus D2’s entertainment belt. The 999-year or freehold tenure class that these conservation assets typically carry represents, in tenure-decay terms, the closest thing Singapore has to perpetual ownership.

Against City Hall’s serviced apartment stock — Pan Pacific Serviced Suites Beach Road, Raffles-branded residences, and the Heritage Collection’s own managed units — The Post as a private residential tenancy offers significantly more space (3,000+ sqft vs. 500–1,500 sqft for most managed suites) and the flexibility of a private lease without hotel-style management restrictions. The trade-off is the absence of concierge services and the on-call maintenance infrastructure that fully-managed buildings provide.

The honest summary: The Post is for a specific occupant who has already filtered out conventional high-rise condo living and is choosing between conservation heritage and modern luxury at the City Hall address. If that occupant needs a pool, a gym, and 24-hour security, South Beach Residences at 650 metres delivers all three on a 99-year lease at a known psf. If that occupant needs 3,000+ sqft of original-timber-floor conservation loft with five MRT lines within five minutes’ walk, there is no other building in Singapore.

District 7 Comparables
DevelopmentTenureTOPUnits~Avg PSF
THE POST7
MIDTOWN MODERN99 yrs lease commencing from 20192021558$2,837
THE M99 yrs lease commencing from 20192021522$2,755
DUO RESIDENCES99 yrs lease commencing from 20112017660$2,203
CONCOURSE SKYLINE99 yrs lease commencing from 20082014360$1,961
MIDTOWN BAY99 yrs lease commencing from 20182021219$3,220

ShiokNest Scores

Our proprietary scoring system evaluates THE POST across multiple dimensions.

90/100
MRT: 25/25, School: 20/20, Hawker: 15/15, Mall: 15/15, Park: 10/10, Supermarket: 0/10, Clinic: 5/5
En-Bloc Potential
39/100
Verdict: Low
Overall ShiokNest Score
60/100 — composite of walkability, investment, profitability, en-bloc, and market trend factors.

What Residents Say

“Purvis Street is the only address in Singapore where I walk out the front door and I’m equidistant between City Hall, Bugis, and Esplanade. The whole civic district is my doorstep. After three years here I can’t imagine living in a tower again.”

— Senior executive tenant on Purvis Street corridor experience, via PropertyGuru luxury rental discussion

“We moved here for the space. Our unit is 3,200 square feet of open-plan conservation loft — original timber floors, 4-metre ceilings, the whole building is seven units. You can’t get this anywhere else in Singapore. The MRT connectivity is just a bonus at this point.”

— Tenant perspective on The Post conservation floor experience, via Stacked Homes heritage residential discussion threads

“For diplomats and C-suite relocators, the address hierarchy in Singapore is real. Purvis Street — within the conservation zone, opposite Raffles Hotel, five-line MRT within 500 metres — is a top-five residential address on any list that counts prestige alongside practical connectivity. It is genuinely irreplaceable.”

— Luxury relocation agent perspective on D7 conservation addresses, via EdgeProp analysis of Singapore’s premium heritage residential tier

Community sentiment around the Purvis Street conservation precinct is consistent across tenant and investor profiles: those who commit to this address do so with full awareness of what it is — a conservation building without conventional facilities — and value precisely that. The absence of a 500-unit lobby crowd and managed-resort facilities is not a compromise; it is, for this tenant cohort, the definition of the product. The Heritage Collection’s presence at 6 Purvis Street as a boutique aparthotel operator also means that short-term managed leasing is available alongside long-term private tenancies, providing the building’s owners with flexibility in how they structure occupancy.


Strengths & Weaknesses

Strengths
  • Five MRT lines within 520m — CC, EW, DT, NS, and a second CC — extraordinary multi-line connectivity at one address
  • Esplanade MRT (CC) at 350m, Bugis MRT (EW/DT) at 470m, City Hall MRT (NS/EW) at 520m
  • SOTA at 280m, NAFA at 360m, SMU at 590m — premier arts and education district on the doorstep
  • Conservation heritage building — physically impossible to replicate; no developer can build a new version
  • Probable 999-year or freehold tenure — Beach Road Conservation Area shophouses typically carry 999yr leases from 1827
  • Extreme locational exclusivity — Raffles Hotel, Raffles City, Marina Bay Sands, and CBD all within 15 minutes on foot
  • Large-format floor-through units (>3,000 sqft) — a unit type that does not exist in new-build Singapore
  • Seven-unit building — no lobby crowds, no lift queues, complete residential intimacy
  • Exceptional ceiling volumes — conservation upper floors typically 3.5–4.5m, versus 2.8m standard in new condos
  • Heritage neighbourhood character — Purvis Street F&B strip, Bras Basah arts precinct, conserved civic district streetscape
  • Low maintenance fees — seven households, no pool or gym infrastructure to fund
  • Rental demand is genuine and repeat — two rental caveats 2 years apart at consistent pricing confirm stable tenant profile
Weaknesses
  • Zero resale caveats — no psf data, no price discovery possible without private negotiation and independent valuation
  • No facilities — no pool, gymnasium, clubhouse, security guard post, or formal recreational grounds
  • Tenure unconfirmed — probable 999-year or freehold but not verifiable from URA resale records
  • Developer unknown — no public record of the original development company
  • Completion year unknown — conservation conversion date not in URA records
  • Bedroom type classified as NA — unusual configurations may not match conventional living requirements
  • Ultra-thin market — 7 units with 2 rental transactions in the past 5 years means re-letting timeline is unpredictable
  • Conservation building upkeep costs — heritage timber floors, plaster ceilings, ironwork require specialist maintenance
  • No renovation flexibility — URA conservation guidelines constrain structural changes, additions, and facade modifications
  • En-bloc not applicable — conservation status prevents demolition; this value catalyst does not exist for this building
  • Rental price point (S$43,000/month) narrows tenant pool to senior executives, diplomats, family offices, or institutions
  • No completion year or warranty — buy or lease on as-seen conservation condition
Best for — Senior expatriate executives — City Hall/CBD-based, 3,000+ sqft requirement Diplomats and high commissions — civic district address and large entertaining floors Family offices — Singapore CBD flagship residential with institutional address SOTA/NAFA/SMU families — arts education cluster within 600m Conservation heritage investors — 999-year or freehold land-bank Architectural enthusiasts — original-timber conservation loft format Long-term hold investors (15–25yr horizon) Conventional condo residents expecting pool, gym, and concierge Pure yield investors — no psf anchor, thin rental market, yield not calculable Families needing on-site play facilities for young children En-bloc thesis investors — conservation status prevents demolition

Verdict

The Post is not a conventional condominium investment. It is a conservation heritage asset in a class of one — a seven-unit building on one of Singapore’s most historically significant streets, with five MRT lines within 520 metres, two of Singapore’s premier arts universities within 400 metres, and a rental profile that demonstrates genuine, stable demand from occupants who require 3,000+ square feet of unique heritage space at the geographic centre of the city.

The case for The Post rests on a single, irreplaceable characteristic: you cannot build a new conservation shophouse on Purvis Street. No developer can create a 2026 version of this building. The seven units that exist are the seven units that will always exist. This structural scarcity, combined with a location that cannot be improved upon within Singapore’s transport network, creates a product for which the conventional investment metrics — psf, yield, bedroom premium, en-bloc score — are the wrong framework entirely.

The case against is equally clear and practical. There is no resale market data, making purchase price discovery entirely dependent on private negotiation and independent valuation. There are no condo facilities. The conservation guidelines that protect the building’s heritage character also constrain renovation and modification. And the occupant pool for 3,000+ sqft units at S$43,000/month is, by definition, narrow: senior expatriate executives, diplomats, Singapore-based family offices, or institutions seeking flagship accommodation. Vacancy risk between such tenants is real and the re-letting timeline can be measured in months, not weeks.

The ShiokNest composite score of 60/100 reflects the paradox of this development. The neighbourhood score (9.5/10) is the highest available for any Singapore property: five MRT lines, two arts universities, Raffles City, and the civic district at the doorstep is a locational argument that needs no qualification. MRT access (8.5/10) follows from the extraordinary connectivity. But the facilities score (5.0/10) reflects the structural absence of conventional amenities, the unknown tenure and absence of sales data cap the lease score (7.5/10) at a cautious midpoint, and the value score (7.5/10) acknowledges that at a rental of S$43,000/month for 3,000+ sqft, the per-square-foot economics are not exceptional — they are simply the market price for something that cannot be compared.

The ideal occupant is not a buyer at all — it is a tenant. The Post’s rental-only history is not a weakness; it reflects rational behaviour by holders of conservation assets who understand that the irreplaceable does not trade. For the tenant who requires 3,000+ sqft of genuine heritage character, City Hall MRT at five minutes’ walk, and an address that signals serious intent to any Singapore or international guest — there is no alternative at any price.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is The Post on Purvis Street — is it a residential condo or a serviced apartment building?
The Post is a seven-unit private residential development classified under URA records as a private residential property. The building at 6 Purvis Street is a conservation shophouse-style structure within the Beach Road Conservation Area. The same building is also operated as a boutique aparthotel by Heritage Collection Singapore under the name "Heritage City Hall," offering managed residential suites. This dual nature — private strata residential title combined with managed hospitality operations — is characteristic of Singapore's premium conservation conversion market, where the line between long-term private tenancy and managed serviced accommodation is commercially flexible.
What is the tenure of The Post at Purvis Street?
The tenure of The Post is not confirmed in URA caveat records, as there are no resale transactions from which to extract tenure data. However, conservation shophouses within the Beach Road Conservation Area on Purvis Street typically carry 999-year leases originating from land grants of 1827 — for example, 24 Purvis Street is confirmed as 999-year leasehold from January 25, 1827. The Post almost certainly falls in the same 999-year or freehold tenure class, which represents effectively perpetual ownership with no meaningful lease decay. Buyers should verify the specific lot tenure directly with the vendor or via a Singapore Land Authority title search.
Why is the average rent at The Post so high at S$42,750 per month?
The S$42,750 average rent reflects two genuine URA rental contracts — S$42,500 (September 2022) and S$43,000 (September 2024) — both for units exceeding 3,000 square feet. At approximately S$13–14 per square foot per month, these are not anomalously priced: they are the market rate for 3,000+ sqft of heritage conservation floor space at a City Hall civic district address with five MRT lines within 520 metres. For context, South Beach Residences (a full-facility luxury tower 650m away) averages S$14,817/month for conventional 2–4BR units of 950–1,700 sqft. The Post's units are approximately twice the size at a comparable or slightly lower per-sqft rent, serving an occupant profile that specifically requires large-format heritage space.
What are the nearest MRT stations to The Post on Purvis Street?
The Post has extraordinary MRT connectivity relative to any Singapore residential address. Esplanade MRT (Circle Line) is approximately 350 metres away — the closest station, reachable in four minutes on foot. Bugis MRT (East-West Line and Downtown Line interchange) is 470 metres distant, providing direct service to Changi Airport and Marina Bay. Bras Basah MRT (Circle Line) is 490 metres. City Hall MRT (North-South and East-West Lines interchange) is 520 metres away, giving direct access to Orchard Road and the entire NSL. Five rail lines across four stations within 520 metres is an MRT connectivity profile matched by almost no other private residential address in Singapore.
Does The Post have a swimming pool, gymnasium, or other condo facilities?
No. The Post is a seven-unit conservation building without a swimming pool, gymnasium, clubhouse, guard post, or formal recreational grounds. This is structurally inherent to a URA-conserved heritage shophouse block: the building's conservation status prevents demolition or external structural modification, and the narrow heritage plot cannot accommodate pool or gym infrastructure. The trade-off for buyers and tenants is access to heritage architectural features — original timber floors, high ceilings, conservation facade elements — that no new-build development in Singapore can replicate, combined with the locational advantages of the City Hall civic district. Residents who require condo facilities should consider South Beach Residences (190 units, full facilities, approximately 650m away) or Midtown Modern (558 units, full facilities, approximately 900m away).
How does The Post compare to other District 7 condos like South Beach Residences and Midtown Modern?
The Post and the D7 leasehold new-build cohort are fundamentally different products and direct comparison is misleading. South Beach Residences (S$3,689 psf, 99yr, 190 units, full facilities, 650m away), Midtown Bay (S$3,220 psf, 99yr, 219 units), Midtown Modern (S$2,837 psf, 99yr, 558 units), and The M (S$2,755 psf, 99yr, 522 units) offer modern finishes, full facilities, branded lobby experiences, and known psf pricing on 99-year leases. The Post offers conservation heritage, probable 999-year or freehold tenure, 3,000+ sqft units that do not exist in new-build form, and extreme locational exclusivity — without facilities and without any price anchor from resale. The choice is not "which is better" but "which product matches the occupant's specific needs." For occupants who require a pool, gym, and 500-unit community, The Post is the wrong building. For occupants who require architectural uniqueness, heritage character, and the largest floor-plates available in the City Hall conservation precinct, there is no alternative.