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ZYON GRAND

ZYON GRAND

A Mixed Development Comprising Of

2 Blocks Of 62-Storey Residential Apartments (706 Units) With Basement Carpark And Communal Facilities

1-Storey Commercial Podium With F&B Units, Supermarket, An Early Childhood Development Centre,

 

1 Block Of 36-Storey Serviced Apartment (373 Units) And

Land Bidded Price: $1202 psf ppr

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CDL

City Developments Limited (CDL) is a leading global real estate company with a network spanning 168 locations in 29 countries and regions. 

Listed on the Singapore Exchange, the Group is one of the largest companies by market capitalisation. Its income-stable and geographically diverse portfolio comprises residences, offices, hotels, serviced apartments, student accommodation, retail malls and integrated developments.

With a proven track record of over 60 years in real estate development, investment and management, the Group has developed over 53,000 homes and owns around 23 million square feet of gross floor area in residential for lease, commercial and hospitality assets globally.

Along with its wholly-owned hotel subsidiary, Millennium & Copthorne Hotels Limited (M&C), the Group has over 160 hotels worldwide, many in key gateway cities.

CDL has achieved the BCA ( Building Control Authority) Quality Excellence Award for twelve consecutive years as of 2024 since the inception of the award in 2013.

CDL's residential porfolio near this area:

Union Square
Canninghill Piers
Irwell Hill Residences
Boulevard 88
St Regis Residences
UP @ Robertson Quay
Grammercy Park
New Futura
One Shenton
The Pier at Robertson

Zyon Grand Location

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Zyon Grand is a mix development with direct connection to Havelock MRT station and walking distance to Great World station on the Thomson East Coast Line.

Zyon Grand site is  along Kim Seng Road and Zion Road and across Great World Mall.

Great World is a one-stop retail and lifestyle destination and is a shopping haven for everyone in the family. Anchor tenants include Best Denki, CS Fresh Supermarket, Food Junction, GV Grand cineplex, Meidi-Ya Japanese supermarket, Toys“R”Us, True Fitness, Uniqlo, Daiso, and Barber, hair salons, nail salon, Oats Cellar, Shake Shake Burger Joint, Cedele Cafe, PS Cafe, Japanese restaurants and Chinese Restaurants - Pu Tien, Imperial Treasures .

The Grand Zyon plot is situated near to Singapore River, it also brings together the best of the 3 quays.

The tranquility of Robertson Quay; the excitement of Clarke Quay; and the vibrancy of Boat Quay. From day to night, weekdays to weekends, there are things to do for every mood and inkling. Go for a morning jog along the river, catch up with friends over brunch at one of the many trendy cafés nearby, go for a romantic riverfront dinner, or plan a fun night out with drinks and music. Best of all, home is just minutes’ stroll away. 

Robertson Quay, the most tranquil of the three quays, brings to mind exclusive, restaurants and private residences offering a distinctive lifestyle.

Two of Singapore’s premier lifestyle destinations, Clarke Quay and Boat Quay have remained popular with both expatriates and locals over the years.  Enjoy the ambience of the river at night, accompanied by good food and drinks, and of course, moments with your loved ones. 

 

Famous Landmarks near Zyon Grand

River Valley in central Singapore, was so named because the area lay in a valley between Fort Canning Hill and Pearl’s Hill. In the 1840s, there were two River Valley roads that ran along either side of the Singapore River. The one to the south of the river is now known as Havelock Road. The present River Valley Road runs from the junction of Eu Tong Sen Street and Hill Street to Delta Road.



Singapore River
Fondly referred to as “The River”, the Singapore River spans 3.2 km from the sea to its upper reaches at Kim Seng RoadBoat Quay was the first to have offices, warehouses, godowns and jetties built along its banks in 1823. Subsequent developments continued up-river, along the banks of Clarke Quay, Robertson Quay, and later even further upstream, near the upper reaches and the source of the Singapore River at Alexandra Canal (formerly a river), as demarcated by Kim Seng Bridge.16 The buildings on the seaward side of Commercial Square (today’s Raffles Place) had their own jetties for passengers and cargo until the reclamation of the Collyer Quay waterfront in the 1860s.  



Times House ( Currently Cosmopolitan, a condominium)
Located at the junction of Kim Seng Road and River Valley Road, Times House was the home for Singapore’s English newspaper The Straits Times for more than four decades.

On November 1984, The Straits Times Press was merged with Times Publishing, Singapore News and Publications and Singapore Newspaper Services to form the Singapore Press Holdings (SPH), whose headquarters was established at its News Centre at Genting Lane. In the subsequent decades, SPH grew and diversified its business from printed newspapers to magazines, radio stations, TV channels, digital media, event management and properties.

SPH moved its headquarters to a new $40m complex at Toa Payoh North in 2002, bringing down the curtains at Times House after 44 years. Its site was subsequently sold a year later to Marco Polo Developments (Wharf Estates Singapore today) for almost $120 million, which went on to demolish Times House in 2004 and build The Cosmopolitan condominium in 2008.


 


Great World Amusement Park (大世界) currently Great World Mall
located along Kim Seng Road  was developed by Lee Choon Yung in 1931 and sold to the Shaw Brothers in 1940.   It grew famous for its cabarets, Chinese and Malay opera halls, shops, restaurants, open-air cinemas, boxing arenas, and shooting galleries, attracted British servicemen and the upper classes, with free films and Peking operas to watch in addition to wrestling and boxing matches.  The traditional song and dance performances were slowly replaced by getai which was slowly growing more popular. As the rubber industry boomed in the fifties, their visitors grew richer and their owners pumped in more money to spruce up the facilities and entertainment available.The boom period slowly came to an end in the seventies and eighties. With the invasion of television, night markets, cineplexes, shopping malls and game arcades, amusement parks became increasingly out of sync with the rhythm of life and people’s habits.
Its five-football-fields-sized site is now home to the mega Great World condo-cum-office and shopping mall.

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Layouts

TBA

Site Plan

TBA

Contact Us

Address

Zion Road
Singapore 

Contact

Opening Hours

Mon - Sun

9:00 am – 11:00 pm

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