Why Singapore housing wants Trash 2.0
Pneumatic refuse systems can reduce manpower by 70%, says Dr Cheong Koon Hean, CEO of Singapore's Housing and Development Board.

Old estate meets new technology
Similar to Yuhua, which is a “very old” estate, HDB is also running test beds in Punggol, a residential area now under construction. The new Punggol town will “have a lot of these smart applications being brought in”, according to Cheong. Homes in Punggol will be fitted out with “smart sockets” which can ‘speak’ to Internet of Things devices, for one.
But despite a lack of the right infrastructure, even old estates can be made smart, Cheong believes. “Even in the old estates, you can go back and retrofit,” she says. HDB has installed solar panels and “a lot of sensors” into Yuhua, and can even monitor if residents “are urinating in the lifts”. “It’s a very common problem in mass housing, right?” Cheong points out.
HDB is now building the “enabling infrastructure” that will go a long way towards creating “liveable, efficient, sustainable and safe towns”, Cheong adds.
The smart city enabler
Sustainability is big on the agenda for the agency, and better planning is key to this. “We use a lot of computer models to help us to design and plan our towns, so that their environmental performance is very good and we can meet our sustainability objectives,” Cheong explains.
The end goal is to save energy, water, and have “much more cost-effective maintenance, lifts, parks, lighting solar panels, etcetera”, says Cheong. HDB oversees one million flats housing 80% of the population, and “we really need to manage them well,” she notes.
Here, data is essential and “very important for the planner”, says Cheong. Data can give HDB a better picture of the demographics and makeup of a town, for example. “You can do a heat map and you know where the ageing population is, and then we can develop all the facilities. We’re now using some of these tools,” she adds.
Ultimately, HDB’s goals are “about people: convenience, safety of the elderly, reliable services, lower utility costs, a better environment for them, and they would be better served by facilities,” Cheong says.
And that is a future Singapore that residents can’t refuse.
Diagram from HDB