The government’s decision to move the Town Hall Link white site off the reserve list and onto the confirmed list for H2 2026 is the real story here — not just the headline figure of 4,745 private homes across nine sites. That single move signals something bigger: the authorities aren’t waiting for developers to show interest in Jurong Lake District anymore. They’re forcing the conversation.
Town Hall Link is a genuinely ambitious parcel. We’re talking roughly 186,000 sq m of GFA, with at least 40,000 sq m of office space, up to 1,200 private homes, hotel rooms, retail, and community uses — all within walking distance of Jurong East MRT and future Cross Island and Jurong Region Line connections. This isn’t a peripheral plot. It’s designed to anchor a live-work-play district that competes seriously with the CBD. To lower upfront complexity for incoming developers, the government is also building out shared district-level utilities, including a district cooling plant and pneumatic waste conveyance system central station that serve the broader precinct.
Here’s the contrarian take: the sheer scale of H2 2026’s confirmed list should give buyers pause, not excitement. Full-year confirmed-list supply hits roughly 9,320 units — more than 50% above the 10-year annual average. The broader pipeline’s swelling from around 57,000 to 61,000 units, with some 32,000 units available for sale over the next two years. That’s not a tight market. Buyers who feel pressured to commit quickly may be reading the wrong signals.
For investors and homebuyers specifically, Jurong East presents a rare window. Projects near Jurong East MRT have historically lagged CBD pricing, but the infrastructure buildout here mirrors what we saw precede J Gateway’s launch in 2013, which moved quickly on strong decentralisation narratives. If office demand follows residential into JLD, that rental catchment story strengthens.
Developer appetite looks steady — GLS tenders averaged about 4.6 bidders per confirmed-list site in 2026, excluding ECs. The Jurong East Avenue 1 EC plot adds 735 units targeting the sandwiched middle-income segment, a cohort that’s consistently shown up for well-located EC launches. The East Coast Road site, which can yield about 85 homes, sits within the Siglap enclave and is positioned for boutique residential development, adding a quieter counterpoint to the large-scale mixed-use ambition of Jurong. Recent policy changes include EC rule tightening, which doubled the minimum occupation period and removed deferred payment options, introducing a transitional dynamic that makes the measured 2026 EC supply of 1,370 confirmed-list units more deliberate than it first appears.
Watch whether Town Hall Link’s tender draws serious mixed-use operators or gets dominated by pure-play residential developers. That outcome will tell us everything about how much confidence the market actually has in Jurong’s decentralisation story.





