On escaping from my unsalvageably fancy apartment

In the summer of 2023, I moved to Singapore. I spent a month looking at apartments and signed a two-year lease on one that seemed to tick the boxes: good location, appropriately-sized for a single person.

Soon after moving in, I had that sinking feeling. I hated it, and nothing could change this. I mentally prepared myself for the two years I’d be bound to it.

Time will fly by. It’ll be fine.

Early on, I stopped trying to make it feel like home. I knew it never would be. The place was too unsalvageably fancy, and I have learned, the hard way, that I am not built for unsalvageable fanciness.

How unsalvageably fancy was it? Let me give you a tour.

The kitchen: a showroom

Who were these built-in appliances for?

  • A wine chiller (I don’t drink alcohol)
  • A combination steam oven (I don’t steam. I definitely don’t combination-steam.)
  • An espresso machine (I didn’t drink coffee at the time)
  • A dishwasher (my Reddit searches for troubleshooting advice turned up hundreds of irate comments)

Chrome appliances daring me to stain them with my grubby fingerprints. No thanks.

The bathroom: a fishbowl

Frosted glass walls. Dear guest: sorry for seeing your silhouette while you pee.

Four unlabeled confusing shower knobs, controlling:

  • A rain shower
  • A waterfall shower 
  • Two horizontal jets shooting from opposite walls (torture if turned on before the water warms up)
  • A hose, just in case the other options weren’t enough

Did any of this make showering better? No.

Welcome to shower-knob roulette.

The balcony I never used

At the risk of sounding like a whingy poohead, the balcony was:

  • Too sunny (I’m a sun wimp)
  • Too small for a table and chair
  • Too dusty for hanging laundry

It became a holding area for neglected plants my cousins gave me. At least the plants thrived.

Bunch of plants that thrived while I ignored them completely.

Floors I was afraid to live on

Shiny, perfect marble floors.

The following would leave a permanent mark if not wiped up immediately:

  • Spilled water
  • A tiny piece of purple cabbage
  • Vinegar
  • Sweat
  • Coffee (probably)

Another week, another stain seeping into the marble’s pores to mark the passage of time.

What’s with all the windows?

From the street, the building looked like a spaceship: sleek, dark, all glass. 

From inside, floor-to-ceiling windows meant:

  • Blinds up = blazing sun heats the apartment, electricity bill shoots up
  • Blinds down = sun heats blinds, releasing a plastic chemical smell into the air, but electricity bill goes down

Only one side of the flat had windows. The deepest part — meant to be my office — was so dark I never used it.

Roller-blinds to prevent the sunlight and heat trying to burst through the floor-to-ceiling windows.

Loft studios: a cautionary tale

Loft studios sound cool. But in practice:

  • Mattress on a loft platform = two years of sleeping with my face one metre from the ceiling
  • Making the bed = risk of concussion
  • No room for a dining table or workspace
  • Wasteful air-conditioning = expensive utilities
  • No walls. No privacy.
  • Could friends stay over? Not really.

But it wasn’t all bad!

Some really wonderful things happened while I lived there.

  1. The groundskeeper gave me a ukulele after he heard a friend and me singing in the shared outdoor space.
  2. I swam in the condo pool once and thought I saw a jellyfish. It turned out to be a fallen jacaranda flower, dancing in the water, rendered translucent.
  3. I watched a cicada fly methodically into the bell of every jacaranda flower in the landscaping.
  4. I rescued a tiny, tiny lizard from a cockroach trap. Olive oil weakened the adhesive. I thought it was dead, but it was alive! It was the cutest thing I’ve ever seen! I let it crawl up and down my arm. Sometimes it came back to visit.
  5. Once, as I was leaving my flat, my neighbour opened her door and handed me a cake. Perfect timing — I was on my way to buy dessert for lunch at a friend’s!
Cicada flying into every single flower.
Tiny lizard on arm that one time I went on the balcony.
Look how tiny and CUTE he is!!!!!!

Surely I learned something?

You didn’t really think I’d endure two years in an unsalvageably fancy, decidedly un-Justina apartment without learning something, did you?

Six months in, I started planning my exit. Around the same time, I was fitting out a new office for work, which forced me to think much more seriously about how spaces actually function. (I wrote about that process on the company blog.)

First, I wrote out my use cases for a home:

Then I created a set of filters:

  • Location: Near my favourite running loop, away from busy streets, walking distance to groceries, under 30 minutes to the office by transit or bike.
  • Condo facilities: Don’t need, don’t care. Plus, they drive up building management fees.
  • Balcony: Do not want. Jacks up rent without adding value.
  • Floor plans: Square rooms; windows facing different directions.
  • Building age: Avoid brand new. Seek dingy, lived-in.

If someone else has already dinged the floor, I don’t have to worry about dinging it myself. This, dear reader, is freedom.

Because I was so specific, it was easy to zero in on the flat of my dreams on PropertyGuru. I only visited one apartment.

I knew it was The One the moment the landlord’s rep opened the door to let me view the flat. I signed the lease that week and moved in five months ago.

Now I finally live in a place that feels like mine.

Who’d have thunk guitars could make nice decor?
Now I have a giant dining table for eating and working at! Tables and chairs collected second-hand from Carousell, the Salvation Army, and Hock Siong. (Exception: red chair from Ikea — I really wanted a red chair!)
Kleenex in boxes and plastic packaging are an eyesore, so I found these funny tissue boxes on Shopee to hide them.
I actually love writing with pencil crayons!
Enormous Klimt replica from Taobao. I assembled the stool at a carpentry workshop at Tombalek.

How nice it feels to finally feel at home!


3 responses to “On escaping from my unsalvageably fancy apartment”


  1. ”If someone else has already dinged the floor, I don’t have to worry about dinging it myself. This, friends, is freedom.”


    This is so true. The function of a home is to be lived in. The function of floor is to be lived on—not tiptoed upon, not avoided, not mollycoddled. It’s there to catch fallen things and provide us with grounding! Floors want us to trample, scamper, sink our claws into them!


    I remember being blasted by the horizontal jets in that terrible shower!!

      • “Walk all over me.
        Spill water on me, scratch me.
        I am a foot guy.”

        A haiku by the Floor

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