Illegal KTV Set Up by New Neighbours Sparks Outrage in Singapore

Illegal KTV Set Up by New Neighbours Sparks Outrage in Singapore

The Unexpected KTV Party in The Plaza

Picture this: you’re settling into your cozy apartment on Beach Road when suddenly your wall‑to‑wall neighbors turn the building into a 24‑hour karaoke club. That’s exactly what’s been happening at The Plaza—and it’s been all gas in the community’s TikTok feed.

“Where’s the Quiet?”, the Alarm Clocks of 1 A.M. By Miss Chen

  • New occupants moved in a month ago, but they’re running a fully illegal KTV joint.
  • Stale marijuana smoke, dice rolling, and the blurting of 5–7 different voices create a soundtrack that screams “party” at midnight.
  • Sounds peak at 3 A.M., rattling everyone’s dreams—yes, even the night‑owl.
  • New crew keeps changing, so you can’t rely on a single voice to bring you peace.
  • Accents? Vietnamese and Taiwanese—making the noise multilingual and unmistakably loud.

How Miss Chen (aka “Miss Chen”) Took Action

After months of being woken up by the ghostly karaoke chorus, she decided it was time to switch from passive awfulness to active surveillance. Her plan:

  • Install a cCTV cam over the front door—because anyone’s worth a good hide‑and‑seek.
  • Review footage the next day to see the unscheduled “guest” appearances.
  • Rolling tape revealed sexy outfits and, spoiler alert, some semi‑intimate moments between men and women.
  • But that’s not all—an eclectic mix of uninvited men and women continue to drop by, turning the apartment into an unplanned clubbing zone.
The Bottom Line: The Plaza’s Unexpected Party

What started as a quiet weekend dorm style? Now it’s a 3‑AM soundtrack featuring everything from Vietnamese T‑song to Taiwanese Chen‑Bok—all wrapped in a haze of cannabis smoke.

Miss Chen’s story has sparked a conversation among neighbors: “Does the building fire alarm get louder than my pizza delivery?”

Nighttime Nonsense: A Raucous Apartment Incident

Picture this: a slick jacket, a suitcase, a squad of men lugging beer cartons, all skating on the dark streets. The footage turned up on a borrowed phone, and the vibes were straight up chaotic.

What the Clips Showed

  • Man in Black pulling a suitcase, followed by more guys” hauling beer crates.
  • “Crash‑landing” pedestrians—men and women floundering, looking like they’d just had a blast at a party—squashed into the scene.
  • All of this happened only at night; by daylight the place was as quiet as a library.

“These scenes only happen at night. It’s all calm during the day,” Miss Chen explained, looking a little baffled by the whole situation.

Who’s Calling the Police?

  • She told the camera, “I called the police and security twice, but nothing happened. What else should I do?”
  • Police spokespersons confirmed the incident via Lianhe Wanbao, providing a fact‑check for the whole situation.

The Apartment’s “Housewarming” Twist

When Miss Chen accompanied the building’s security officer to inspect the unit on Nov 20, the door opened to reveal a guy claiming he had just moved in. He chuckled and said he was hosting a house‑warming party—apparently not a quiet one, considering the chaos outside.

Bottom Line

While the apartment might have been “quiet” during the day, the nighttime antics proved otherwise. Miss Chen’s frustration bleeds through the footage, and the police confirm the series of odd events. The story ends with a baffled man, a sudden house‑warming and a question hanging in the air—what else can she do? The answer? Stay calm, keep the night lights on, and hope for a smoother tomorrow.

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When Your Neighbor Sleeps on the Wrong Song

Case of the Midnight Karaoke Wars

Picture this: your alarm clock already broken on a Sunday morn, plus the unexpected rhythm of a neighbor’s boisterous karaoke session blasting from their living room. It’s a classic showdown of “Do I need to switch to a different AM/FM station or a new apartment?”

  • The Fable of the Two Doorways
    The neighbor, who loves singing, doesn’t realize they’re the only in the building who smarts open their front door each morning. They’ve built an “intimate concert hall” inside their home – but 5–10 meters deep into the hallway, their booming voice isn’t just a sing-song affair; it’s a bass drop that echoes off the walls like a subway train.
  • Sound‑seeking Solutions
    The unwitting victim has tried everything: noise-canceling headphones, earplugs, or even a DIY “light warranty” by labeling the door as “Noise Control Zone.” Surprisingly, none worked because the sound is still the louder diva on a dance stage.
  • Cooperative Harmonies
    The most effective strategy? Talk, negotiate, and use humor. A friendly chat over coffee increased empathy. They even arranged a schedule: no karaoke after 10 p.m.; karaoke during a tourist’ lunch break. Two ‘variations’ of the same track – one for the queasy floor and another for the lounge. An affordable speaker consultation may turn the unit to “soothing, low volume” mode to avoid the next verse turning into a war of whispers.
  • Legal Notes
    Every city’s noise ordinance requires basic quietness in residential buildings. If the neighbor persists, a construction or basement wall reinforcement is a quick fix – a tiny barrier (like an acoustic panel) can reduce the hertz level to ambient peace.
  • When to Seek “Neighbors’ Mediators”
    If the bar on the scene is louder than the neighbor’s personal love song, contact the property manager or homeowners association. A formal notice for possible “noise violation” is a final but harmless way to show seriousness – no more free concerts stemming from the neighbor’s karaoke notes.

Better than a repertoire full of mean lyrics is a friendly peace pledge among neighbors. The next minute you should get a voice command: “Yes, we will stop it at midnight.” – We must combine real tact – emotional equality and shared brilliance of the neighbors. If an update follows, it’s a editor’s future.