Saturday, May 31, 2008

General tips for building a house in Brunei

31st May 2008


Before deciding to build a house, there are quite a number of factors that need to be considered. Especially in Brunei, you have to undergo numerous stages and you need to pass each stage before you are even granted to build your house. Based on my experience, thorough preparation either mentally or physically was fully utilised and almost exhausted but in the end it’s all worth it. These are few of the lists that I could think off based on my experience before and while building my dream house.

1. Firstly, you need to confirm the location of your land whether it is within or outsite the Town and Country planning area (Jabatan Perancang Bandar dan Desa). If the land is outside the Town and Country planning area, it will certainly make your life and approval of your house to be a lot easier as you will only deal with the Land Department (Jabatan Tanah). In my case, my land was only several metres within the Town and Country Planning line and in this case it proved to be a lot difficult and tedious as several approval stages had to be met which took quite a lot of time than anticipated. Do not also forget to pay the land taxes and any outstanding payments i.e. presumably you have not paid the taxes for several years.

2. Once your location is confirmed, and depending whether you need to land fill your area you will also need to apply for the Earth Work Permit. In my case, I had to apply for the earth work permit from the Town and Country Planning department. In this stage, you need to submit a copy of the land grant (geran tanah), survey map (map juruukur) which you could get from the Survey department, the contractor company that will do the earth work, the specific land that you will excavate for the land filling and a sketch of the land you want to land fill by using word document or print artist. In the sketch you need to specify the height that you want to land fill and the position of the earth drain.

3. If your land is more 0.5 acres, you will also need to do a topographic survey which needs to be submitted along with the earth work application. In my case, since the land is almost 2 acres, I had no choice and had to spend just under $1K for the survey.

4. The approval for the earth work application took almost 1 month. And once you completed the earth work i.e. levelling or land filling, you need to notify the Town and Country department (if applicable) for them to check and validate the earth work. And this took almost another month before they grant you a formality letter with their clauses that had to be adhered. However, by the time I received the validation letter for completion of the earth work, I had to wait almost 3 months for the letter.

5. Presumably before all of the above things takes place, you had your house plan up and ready for the submission as well and you could only do this after the Earth Work application has been approved and validated. Remember to notify the Land Department of your intention to build a house as you need to pay “Royalty” for the land filling or else, they will not approve your house building application.

6. In the house plan I had made several considerations as listed below depending on your taste and design;
a) Position of the electrical fittings i.e. lights, fans, air-cons, switches, water heater, exhaust fan should be included and available in the house plan.
b) Reasonable living room, dining, bedroom or bathroom sizes and spaces. Get a measuring tape from a local store and each time you took a glance at the house plan, measure it against the actual area in order to avoid future regrets.
c) Depending on your budget, make sure that all the necessary rooms are included. Planning on the numbers of rooms and the position of these rooms are equally as important as designing them. In our case, we invest on having a walk-in closet, a home theatre room, a study room, guest bedroom, a prayer room, ablution area, powder room, fully ensuite bedrooms for our kids, separate dry and wet kitchens, a dedicated laundry area, store rooms, a dining room and 2 living rooms i.e. formal and informal and a garage.
d) Lastly I think you should not change your plan a lot. Be firm with your decision and think it through and not just leaving all the thinking to your architect. Your preference is all it matters as you will live and let your kids grow in your house for many years to come.


7. The house construction application took much longer than I anticipated as it took me almost half a year before I was granted the approval. Within the application, there were several stepping blocks that I had to encounter such as, I was asked to do a staking out survey from a registered surveyor which cost me a good $400. Then there were the plan issue that the Town and Country planning was not happy about and need to do minor changes on the plan. By the way, 10 sets of the house plan need to be printed out for the approval as it had to be submitted to several government department namely; Jabatan Daerah, Jabatan Kesihatan, Jabatan Ukur, Jabatan Tanah, Jabatan Kerja Raya, Jabatan Electric, Jabatan Bomba, Jabatan Perancang Bandar dan Desa and Jabatan Telekom. Once any change is made to the plan, you will need to submit the latest version again to all these departments. However, all of this will be done and followed up by your architect. All you can do is just sit tight and wait.

8. Once your house is approved, and then you are only half way for the exciting bit of building your dream home.
Just a word of advice, have a lot of patience and visit your site as often as possible and do not just leave it to your architect or your construction manager. You know what you want for your dream home and always trust your instinct. Ask questions if you are not sure about the layout of the construction and pay a visit to your architect and construction manager. Ensure and build a good relationship with them and especially to the construction workers as they put a lot of man hour and hard work in building your house. People make mistakes and it’s all up to us to spot that mistake before it is too late.

Friday, May 30, 2008

The 1st floor columns are done...

30th May 2008

After the visit to De Castle, I went to the site to check on the progress of the house. The 1st floor columns are done and they have now started working on the roof beams. There are still a lot of work to be done before the roof beams are ready. At the same time, there are 4 additional Indonesian skilled brick layerers started living at the worker's quarters. They had also started dismantling the 1st floor wooden support before they start laying the bricks for the ground floor walls.

The usual overview of the house

The Main Entrance...You could almost feel the high ceiling at the main reception area.


The Master Suites and the Home Theater

The kids bedrooms


From the Master Suites overlooking the kids bedroom

View of the sunset towards the kids bedroom

A Visit to De Castle...

30th May 2008

Perhaps it has been every kid's dream of living in a castle one day. But to my friend, it is a dream come true and a privilege to own one. This afternoon after work, I had the opportunity to drop by at my friend's newly built house in Tutong district. Coincidently, we had the same contractors for building our house and his architect is also my 2nd architect. He was the one responsible for introducing me to my current contractor in the 1st place...Thanks Osmali. The castle is almost done except for the light fittings and small details before he can fully move in. His unique design of the house has managed to mesmerise whoever visited his house. Just take a look and enjoy the picture below...

De Castle...

The open space overlooking the sky at the centre of the house. Directly below it is the indoor pond leading towards the entrance to the Master bedroom.


I like the rail design at the top of the living room.

This spiral staircase situated in the Master bedroom leading to the study area and the balcany at the top of the house.

The open area and the tower at the top of the house...

Pictures courtesy and with permission of Osmali De Castle

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Progress as at 28th May 2008

28th May 2008

For the past four days I had been visting the site and taking some pictures but I didn't have the time to update the blog. This afternoon, after the National Student Paper Contest event held at University of Brunei Darussalam, organised by the Brunei SPE (Society of Petroleum Engineering) and STEP Centre (Science, Technology and Environment partnership) of the Ministry of Education, I had the opportunity of going to the site again to view any progress made so far. Today, they had almost completed cementing the 4th pole at the front of the house. I had the opportunity to record the time when I was at the site on Sunday, and it takes almost 45 minutes to fill up each pole with cement using a good old bucket.

The 1st pole as at 25th May 2008 (Sunday)


The 1st pole had dried up and its up for the 2nd pole as at 26th May 2008 (Monday)


The 3rd pole was next on 27th May 2008 (Tuesday)

As of today, the 4th pole was being prepared

The view from the top of the stairs

The columns at the kids bedrooms were being prepared. All of the columns will be done in 2 days time.

The whole overview of the house overlooking the Master Suite at the top of the house as of yesterday

The whole overview as of today


The holes for the columns at the home theater room were being drilled...due to the misplacement of the columns in the first place (details in previous posts).

The AC platform at the back of the house...I just realised the huge space!! If I had extra money, I could have converted this space for a balcony...

Enjoying the sunset from the back of the house as at Monday 26th May 2008

News from Brisbane

28 May 2008


I'm delighted when my wife told me this morning that she had managed to buy two up and down pole lights that I have been surveying in Brunei (refer earlier posts). The price that I could get here is B$170 each. To my amazement, my wife managed to get two of them for AU$226.90 including delivery charges since she made the purchase online. That is approximately B$290.00, a saving of around B$50.00! I know it doesn't sound much but at this stage, any amount that we manage to save is definitely worth it to enable us to invest more on other fixtures for the house.

My wife showed the delivered lightings via the web-cam, and they look great. I'll be able to see them myself when my wife and kids arrive from Brisbane next week on Saturday. Looking forward to that definitely!

Saturday, May 24, 2008

Mini pool in the house

24th May 2008

Almost 2 days after the last update, all the cement on the 1st floor has now hardened and dried. The wooden frames had been removed leaving the cement floor exposed. The construction workers had also started working on the 1st floor columns and the front poles columns too.

Unfortunately, after inspecting the progress of the house, I noticed that there were some columns which were misplaced and were not supposed to be where they are. I wish I had spotted them earlier and the only thing left to do is to hack them and reposition it to the right place. I had checked with my wife regarding this issue and I thought we could improvise by designing a marble pole at the top of the stairs. However, she gave the final word of removing it and to follow the original plan in order not to obstruct the view from the top and from below. I entirely agree...


The whole overview of the house

Erecting the columns for the front poles


The stairs from the main entrance. Notice the 2 poles at the top of the stairs. These have to be removed and repositioned next to the kid's bedroom walls and the other one to the home theater's wall. The original idea was to put the hand rail at the top of the stair cases from the middle of the wall up until the centre of the stair cases.

The view of the staircase from the top

From the front. The workers are preparing the steel beams for the giant columns at the front of the house.. One more column to go...

The home theater

The mini swimming pool at one of the kid's bathroom... By the way, all of the bedrooms in the house have on-suite bathrooms, so this 'pool' is one of them.

From the walk-in closet. Noticed the column at the centre of the picture which is directly infront of the Master Suites entrance. This was not supposed to be there and it has to be removed by tomorrow.

The site supervisor, Mr. Asi, checking the house plan. You can also see the column again behind Mr. Asi. It should be repositioned along the wall of the kids' bedroom's entrance which is next to the bathroom. This is where the hand rail starts. Sorry Mr. Thomas (the construction manager) for calling you about the column's issue. Apparently he is in Taiwan now for a business trip...

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Good cement job...

22nd May 2008

As mentioned in my previous posting that today is the day the cement is poured to the 1st floor. The whole operation lasted from morning till afternoon and even by the time I arrived at the site, the cement at the Master Suite and the home theater is still wet. The other part of the area has almost dried. Take a good look at the pictures below...










The pond adjacent to the back of my land

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Ready to cement...

21st May 2008

At last, all the hard work preparing the wooden frame and steel bar and frame for the 1st floor is complete. The construction manager, Mr. Thomas informed me that they will cement the first floor by tomorrow morning at 8 am. The cement job may last till afternoon due to the large area. A total of 10 cement trucks and a crane has been ordered for the job. I wish I could witness the historic event, however, I had to go to work tomorrow. I'll drop by in the afternoon to see the progress.

The whole overview of the house

The double staircase are now ready to be cemented. Thanks to the expertise of my construction site supervisor and his helpers to construct such an elegant structure..


The view of the staircases from a different angle

Another view of the staircases from the top



The kid's bedrooms ready for cement

The home theater and Master suites


Crossroad of pipes for the wiring

I noticed that the beam at the main entrance (where the worker is sitting on) was not supposed to be there in the 1st place as the main entrance wall will all be covered with glass. It has been overlooked and luckily I was able to spot it before they cement by tomorrow. They will have to dismantle the wooden frame by tomorrow morning.


The construction manager Mr. Thomas and the site supervisor Asi discussing about the final site preparation for tomorrow. Thank you Mr. Thomas for dropping by and checking out the progress of the house. Apparently, my construction manager knows how to speak Thai which is quite impressive.