
Wee Hur is picking up One Bedford Place at 64% Off an earlier valuation (Image: Colliers)
Singapore developer and fund manager Wee Hur Holdings has made a two-pronged entry into Hong Kong’s student housing market, acquiring a distressed Kowloon office tower at 64 percent below its estimated value earlier this year and securing a master lease on a 246-bed student accommodation asset on Hong Kong Island, according to market sources and a company statement.
The SGX-listed group is paying HK$720 million ($92 million) to acquire One Bedford Place, a newly completed commercial tower in Tai Kok Tsui, Kowloon from receivers appointed by Bank of East Asia, according to market sources who spoke with Mingtiandi, with local news reports in February having pointed to a HK$1.98 billion value for the 29-storey property.
Separately, Wee Hur’s hospitality arm has entered a joint venture with a recently established private company named Starvia Holdings to rebrand a serviced apartment complex in Fortress Hill under its Y Suites brand via a master lease arrangement, the company said in a statement filed with the Singapore Exchange on Friday.
“Hong Kong is one of Asia’s most compelling student accommodation markets, with strong, policy-backed demand and a clear shortage of quality, professionally managed supply,” said Eric Wang, deputy general manager of Wee Hur Hospitality. “Through our partnership with Starvia and the Y Suites platform, we are excited to bring our hospitality and operating capabilities into a new market.”
Two Properties, Two Structures
One Bedford Place occupies a full block in Tai Kok Tsui, a bustling district in west Kowloon roughly 10 minutes’ walk from both Prince Edward and Olympic MTR stations. The 184,000-square-foot (17,094-square-metre) tower sits close to Hong Kong Polytechnic University’s West Kowloon campus and Hong Kong Metropolitan University’s Ho Man Tin campuses.

Wee Hur executive chairman and managing director Goh Yeow Lian
Receivers appointed by Bank of East Asia had put the property at 100–114 Bedford Road up for a tender in February, with the newly completed building said to be worth HK$1.98 billion. At HK$720 million, Wee Hur is paying approximately HK$3,913 per square foot, according to a Mingtiandi calculation.
The building spans 29 storeys, with shops on the lower floors, a sky garden at podium level and 23 office floors above earmarked for conversion to student use. It carries a BEAM Plus Gold sustainability rating and is zoned for general business purposes.
Lofter Group had assembled the One Bedford Place site in 2018 at a cost of HK$503 million before paying a further HK$414 million land premium to convert the property from industrial to commercial use and developing the project.
The local value-add investor came under severe financial pressure before it could sell or lease the completed tower and Bank of East Asia appointed receivers to the property early this year. Carol Chow Pui-yin, 43, founder and chairwoman of Lofter Group, died on 12 May 2026, with no note found and police investigating the circumstances of her death.
The Fortress Hill asset was operated until recently as Shama Fortress Hill, a serviced apartment property on the north shore of Hong Kong Island, directly opposite Fortress Hill MTR station. Wee Hur’s partner in operating the 19-storey building, Starvia Holdings, is a private company incorporated in December of last year.
The residential tower is a single MTR stop away from Hong Kong Shue Yan University in North Point, while City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Metropolitan University and the University of Hong Kong are all accessible by a short MTR journey. Wee Hur said it expects to begin leasing 246 beds to students under its Y Suites brand, including units ranging from self-contained studios to four-bedroom suites, in the second half of 2026.
Wee Hur Expands Student Strategy
The Hong Kong moves extend a student housing platform Wee Hur built over five years in Australia, where it launched the Y Suites brand in 2020 and developed roughly 6,000 beds near universities in Sydney and Melbourne in partnership with Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC. The group sold the seven-asset portfolio to US multifamily giant Greystar for A$1.6 billion ($1.01 billion) in late 2024.
Since the Greystar sale, Wee Hur has continued to build its student housing fund management business, establishing a new A$57 million fund in November to hold a development in Adelaide.
In its statement on the King’s Road agreement, Wee Hur said, “The investment is consistent with the Group’s strategy of deploying capital into alternative real estate asset classes that address structural undersupply and generate stable, long-term returns. The Group will continue to evaluate opportunities to further expand its portfolio in Hong Kong.”
Hong Kong Housing Wave
Wee Hur’s entry adds to a growing wave of institutional investment in Hong Kong student housing as the city’s non-local student admission quota at publicly funded universities rises to 50 percent from the 2026/27 academic year, up from 20 percent two years earlier. Colliers estimates current supply falls short of demand by approximately 94,000 beds.
In March this year, Centaline Investment, the investment arm of one of Hong Kong’s largest property agencies, acquired the 494-room Regal Oriental Hotel in Kowloon City from Regal REIT for HK$1.5 billion, marking its third student housing acquisition in the city.
During that same month, Mingtiandi reported that China Resources Longdation, a commercial property unit of state-owned China Resources Holdings, agreed to buy the Hotel Cozi Oasis in Kwai Chung from Stan Group for HK$953 million for student housing conversion.
During February, Rava Partners-backed Dash Living picked up a Wan Chai hotel from Gale Well at 70 percent off its 2019 asking price, with the company leasing a significant portion of its rooms to students.
