Saturday, February 24, 2007

Opal Damansara Show Rooms : The Bedrooms

We took quite a lot of pictures in the Two Show Rooms / Show Units of Opal Damansara.

So as not to jam up your bandwidth, we're breaking up the photos into three sections.

The Hall, The Kitchen (with Maid's Room), The Bedrooms.


Opal Damansara Show Rooms :
The Bedrooms

Opal Damansara has a total of 3 Bedrooms (not counting the Maid's Room)
Bedroom 1
Build in wardrobe with sliding doors, to maximize space

Bedroom 1
This picture overlooks Bedroom2
We wanted to highlight that the aircond unit is always situated
on top of each bedroom door.

The aircond preparation work are all pre-done.

Bedroom1
Can comfortably fit a Queen Size Bed
and still have room to move around.



Bedroom 1
We wanted to highlight that Opal Damansara was thoughtful in their
design and building, to have a space made for the air cond condensors.
This space is actually accessed from the Master Bedroom toilet window.



Bedroom2
Comfortable and cosy

Bedroom 2
They had a light effect and they elevated the bed area


Bedroom 2
The Wardrobe was also with sliding doors for space reasons
*NOTE* Bedroom 1 & 2 shares a toilet outside (didnt feature in the photos here)


Master Bedroom
This is what you see when you enter the Master Bedroom
Proposed area for Vanity and TV


Master Bedroom
King Size bed, with mirror
mounted on top, and curtains on the right


Master Bedroom
Another picture of the Curtains

Master Bedroom
Entrance and as mentioned the Aircond Unit
above the Door Frame

Master Bedroom
Glass Wardrobe - pretty nifty.
Its a walk thru wardrobe.
The entrance to the Toilet
is flanked with a Glass Wardrobe
on the Right and Left.
Hmm .. size may be a bit too small.


Master Bedroom
This is Yellow Light above the Entrance to the Toilet
With the Glass Wardrobe on the Left and Right



Master Bedroom
Toilet Picture with seperate shower stall


Master Bedroom
The shower stall area


Master Bedroom

Opal Damansara Show Rooms : The Kitchen (+ Maid's Room)

We took quite a lot of pictures in the Two Show Rooms / Show Units of Opal Damansara.

So as not to jam up your bandwidth, we're breaking up the photos into three sections.

The Hall, The Kitchen (with Maid's Room), The Bedrooms.


Opal Damansara Show Rooms :
The Kitchen (+ Maid's Room)

As like all Showrooms, the Kitchen was very well done.
Every inch and corner was used up.
This picture shows the Right Side of the Kitchen
Proposed area for Drawers, Cabinets, Hob and Hood.
*Note* There is no door from Kitchen to Hall.


This is the Left Side of the Kitchen.
Proposed area for the Fridge, Mircrowave Oven


This is what you see if you look straight into the Kitchen
The Sink placement and a Window.


On the Left Side of the Sink is the entrance to the "Air Well" and
Maid's Room.
*Nice feature - Maid's Room*
Proposed area for Washing Machine, Dryer and Clothes Hanger.
[Guess if you don't have a maid, you can use it as a Store Room]

The Maid's Bedroom. Small and Tight
But sufficient. As you can see the only space
for a cupboard is mounted on the Wall above the bed.


This is GOOD! The Maid can have access to their
own Bathroom complete with Sink, Shower and Toilet.
You can do it up well and can be used as an alternate Guest Toilet too.




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Opal Damansara Show Rooms : The Hall

We took quite a lot of pictures in the Two Show Rooms / Show Units of Opal Damansara.

So as not to jam up your bandwidth, we're breaking up the photos into three sections.

The Hall, The Kitchen (with Maid's Room), The Bedrooms.


Opal Damansara Show Rooms : The Hall



This is the Main Entrance, with a Built-In cabinet on the side



The Built In Cabinet has several levels, with a Square Opening in the Middle.

Pretty neat if that's where you would like to keep your house keys.

You can use the Bottom for Shoes, but it may be rather limited.



This is how the Hall would look like if you are standing at the Door.

Long Entrance like looking.

The Kitchen is on your left.



This is just outside the Kitchen.

You can see the Frame Opening from the Kitchen to the Hall.

Lots of Mirrors in the Hall.


Dining Area, just next to the Frame Window (kitchen)



This is the Right section of the Hall

where the propose TV is installed.

As you can see lots of Mirror Work to help magnify the space.



This is the Left Section of the Hall.

From Sofa to TV is just under 10 Feet.



Wanted to capture the "points / sockets" provided

at the TV Console area.


We like the Electrical Switches.

Its different from the normal design in most homes

The Intercom to the Guard House is located at the Hall area.



From the Hall, if you draw the Curtains,
there's a Balcony which currently shows a view of the Main Entrance (Guardhouse)

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Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Opal Damansara Facade


We recently visited the two Show Rooms (Units) of Opal Damansara
and managed to capture some photos of the Hall, Kitchen and Bedrooms.

We will post the photos up in the next few days.

Meanwhile, this is the superstructure of Opal Damansara,
it looks ready and beautiful.
The landscaping of Opal Damansara is already coming online.



This is the Facade of Opal Damansara Block A.
The Ribbons is showing where the Show Units are.
(mind you, the elevators were not in operations yet, so you would have to
climb up two flights of stairs to get to it)



The dark grey-ish building on the Left is the
Multi-Storey Carpark facility of Opal Damansara.
Each Condo unit is entitled to Two Covered Car Parks.


The Security to Opal Damansara looks pretty decent.
We like the Glass covered room and the unique
roofing of the Guard House.


This is the Side Entrance to Opal Damansara Block A
Walk up these wooden stairs and it will lead you to the
Show Units / Show Rooms upstairs.

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Monday, February 12, 2007

NEWS: New Building Cert in April - The Certificate of Completion and Comlpiance (CCC)

Finally a New Building Cert that may actually help us House Buyers!

Let's wait and see if the CCC will be beneficial to all of us. :)




KUALA LUMPUR: The Certificate of Completion and Compliance (CCC) is expected to be implemented in April to replace the existing Certificate of Fitness for Occupancy (CFO).

Housing and Local Government Minister Datuk Seri Ong Ka Ting said Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi would make an announcement on the CCC in April.

He said his ministry was now finalising the regulations and other details before sending the file on the CCC to the Attorney-General’s Chambers for it to be gazetted.

“We have to go through a lot of procedures before the CCC can officially replace the CFO.

“We are now briefing local authorities and departments on the changes and the role of each (Government) agency,” he said.

The CCC was one of the amendments made under the Street, Drainage and Building Act 1974 to give better protection to housebuyers.

Under the amendments, the architect or engineer of a project who is defined as the “principal submitting person” will have to issue the CCC before occupants could move into their buildings.

At present, the power to check the technical aspects of a project and issue the CFO is with the local authorities.

The amendments were passed in Parliament last December together with amendments made in five other related Acts under the Works Ministry and the Environment and Natural Resources Ministry.

Ong said the CCC would help speed up development projects if developers adhered to all the regulations set by the Government.

As such, he said, developers would not be able to blame any delay on bureaucracy.

“But it is not just for the sake of speed. Developers have to adhere to rules for the sake of the safety (of occupants),” he said before handing out hampers and ang pows to poor families at Taman Tasik Titiwangsa here yesterday.

Source

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Saturday, February 10, 2007

NEWS: In pursuit of the Elusive Strata Title

HOMEOWNERS of properties without individual titles are in limbo. Most of them are apartment and condominium owners, whose numbers run into hundreds of thousands.

According to the National House Buyers Association’s website www.hba.org.com, more than 29 per cent of the approximately 30,000 complaints made each year to the Ministry of Housing and Local Government against developers relate to their failure to issue buyers with individual strata titles.

This figure is set to break the 30 per cent barrier this year. Failure to provide the buyer with the basic document of ownership, the elusive strata title, has become a disgrace in the administration of land matters, especially since it has been 22 years since the Strata Title Act 1985 was passed.

Without the strata title, homeowners face substantial problems and added costs in the use and enjoyment of their property.

For starters, they can be held to ransom by unscrupulous developers who choose to profiteer from service and maintenance charges and misuse sinking fund money while providing shoddy services.

Recently, homeowners have complained about this. They also face unjustifiable increases in charges when trying to sell their property when it does not have a strata title, as some developers have been known to demand unreasonable administrative charges and legal fees for "vetting the documents".

More serious, however, are the increased water and electricity rates these homeowners face because they lack an effective body to negotiate with the utility providers on the basis for charges.

The overall lack of transparency in many management companies and breaches of the Housing Developer (Control And Licensing) Act 1966, which requires them to give owners audited accounts, has made the situation intolerable.

It appears that the promises of the glossy advertising brochures have long since been forgotten, after the bitterness of the reality of high-rise property ownership sinks in.

In several cases, the developer’s management company or agent have misused even the sinking fund money, sold off car parks and spent the money allocated for the strata titles for other purposes.

Some developers and their management companies have also gone into liquidation, leaving the homeowners stranded and having to deal with a large number of creditors.

In the past, even electricity and water supply have been cut to apartments because the developer’s management company was unable to pay the electricity bills, even though responsible owners had been promptly paying their charges.

In short, the situation is an absolute mess. Under the present law, until the strata title has been issued, a homeowner’s management corporation cannot be formed and so homeowners cannot effectively deal with these problems.

In fairness, there are some responsible developers who have done a good job, but the present number of complaints suggests the problem is serious.

Despite a 22-year-old law that ma- kes it mandatory for a developer to apply for strata titles within six months of the sale and purchase agreement, the strata title remains the elusive holy grail of high-rise ownership. There appears to be no effective enforcement against offenders of the Strata Titles Act 1985, and impotence on the part of some to make these errant developers accountable.

In addition to prosecution under the Act by the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources and the blacklisting of errant developers and their directors by the Ministry of Housing and Local Government, money in the housing developers’ accounts for the project should also be seized to cover the cost of the strata titles if, after six months, no proper application is made.

Unless there is genuine will to protect the public, the recent 2006 amendment to the Strata Titles Act 1985, which, among others, increases the penalties against the developer, will fail and it will just be a case of "all bark and no bite".

No doubt the 2006 amendment to the Housing Developers (Control and Licensing) Act 1966, which links the final 2.5 per cent of the purchase price to the issuance of strata title, will help homebuyers of new projects.

But for the rest, the nightmare continues with the hope that the new Building and Common Property (Maintenance and Management) Act 2006, once implemented, will lead homeowners to the "promised land".

The management of apartments and condominiums is very profitable, especially if there is no transparency and accountability. Although Section 21 of the Valuers, Appraisers and Estate Agents Act 1981 prohibits a developer from charging property management fees, some developers have resorted to innovative ways to "milk the cow".

Some of the techniques used are denying access to accounts, charging large directors’ fees, engaging service providers at inflated prices, selling car parks allocated for the public and, in some cases, building on, leasing out and using the common property for private benefit. In cases of commercial property, the whole issue of income from parking charges needs to be looked at.

Many of these actions may violate the law and some may constitute criminal offences under the Penal Code, such as cheating and criminal breach of trust. However, there must be a will to enforce the law.

What homeowners should do, once the new management corporation is formed under the Strata Titles Act or empowered under the Building and Common Properties Act 2006, is to immediately commission a forensic audit of all accounts inherited from the previous management, if the accounts warrant such treatment.

They must make sure that when they take over, everything is fully disclosed and transparent because, in some instances, they end up with a serious cash-flow deficit.

The simplest solution to the strata titles problem, and a solution to most of the homeowners’ complaints, is to make mandatory the 10/90 model for the sale of property governed by the Housing Developers Act 1966.

This means unless the strata title is registered in the name of the buyer, the developer will not be entitled to the balance purchase price. This is quite normal when property with an individual title is bought and sold.

However, there are a lot of "lame duck" excuses as to why this cannot be mandatory, even though most people conduct business on the basis that full payment is made after the job is completed.

It is a joke that when a person has paid the full purchase price for his property, he has not got the strata title after 10 years.

It remains to be seen how effective the amendments and new laws will be in solving this problem. If they don’t work, then the 10/90 model must be made mandatory. Until then, caveat emptor (buyer beware).

Source

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