The Coastal Settlement occupies a converted heritage building on Netheravon Road in Changi Village, a quieter corner of Singapore that most dining itineraries overlook. The space blends vintage furniture, open-air terraces, and all-day dining in a format that sits outside the city-centre fine-dining circuit. It draws a loyal local crowd and weekend visitors who value atmosphere over accolades.
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- Address
- 200 Netheravon Rd, Singapore 508529
- Phone
- +65 6475 0200
- Website
- thecoastalsettlement.com

A Different Kind of Singapore Dining Room
Singapore's dining conversation concentrates heavily on the central districts: Tanjong Pagar for its dense restaurant blocks, Dempsey Hill for its colonial bungalow conversions, and the CBD corridor for its escalating fine-dining tier. Odette, Les Amis, and Zén anchor the upper bracket of that conversation, with tasting menus, Michelin recognition, and reservation queues to match. The Coastal Settlement operates in a different register entirely. Its address, 200 Netheravon Road, deep in the Changi Village area near the northeastern edge of the island, already signals that the venue is not competing for the same audience as Singapore's tasting-menu circuit.
The physical approach matters here. Changi Village is one of Singapore's more genuinely low-key neighbourhoods, defined by kampung-era nostalgia, proximity to the coast, and a pace that the central districts abandoned years ago. Arriving at The Coastal Settlement, you encounter a sprawling heritage property, colonial-era architecture, vintage signage, old furniture arranged across indoor and outdoor zones, that reads more like a lifestyle destination than a conventional restaurant. This is all-day dining designed around lingering, and the setting enforces that intention.
What the Menu Structure Reveals
The menu architecture at venues like The Coastal Settlement tells you something important about how they position themselves relative to Singapore's broader dining spectrum. All-day formats that span brunch, afternoon, and dinner service without a fixed tasting structure are a deliberate choice: they signal accessibility over exclusivity, breadth over editorial curation, and social occasion over gastronomic focus. Where Jaan by Kirk Westaway or Meta use menu architecture as a statement of culinary intent, all-day operations like this use it as a hospitality statement: come at any hour, bring any combination of guests, and find something that works.
That breadth is not without its own discipline. Singapore's most successful all-day venues tend to anchor their menus around a legible identity, typically a core cuisine with selective cross-cultural borrowing, rather than treating the format as licence for a global grab-bag. The Coastal Settlement's eclectic, Western-leaning menu, set against its heritage surroundings, places it in a recognisable local category: the lifestyle café-restaurant that uses atmosphere and occasion as primary draws, with food quality as a supporting factor rather than the lead argument. This category includes strong performers across Singapore, from Cicheti in Rochor to Béni in Orchard, though each operates with distinct culinary ambitions.
Understanding this positioning helps set expectations correctly. Visitors comparing The Coastal Settlement to Singapore's award-tracked restaurant tier are using the wrong frame. The comparison set is more usefully the city's weekend-destination dining operations: places where the experience is shaped as much by the property and the occasion as by what arrives on the plate.
The Changi Village Context
Locating a destination restaurant in Changi Village is a strategic decision, even if it reads as simply geographic. The neighbourhood sits far enough from Orchard Road and the Marina Bay cluster that it draws a self-selecting crowd, people who have made a deliberate trip rather than dropping in between other appointments. That self-selection tends to produce a more relaxed dining room, with less of the performative energy that can characterise central-district venues.
The area also carries genuine historical texture. Netheravon Road itself has British colonial-era roots, and the surrounding precinct retains low-rise, kampung-adjacent character that most of Singapore's urbanisation has erased. For a venue built around heritage aesthetics and vintage furniture, this neighbourhood provides an authentic backdrop rather than a manufactured one. It is a meaningfully different Singapore from what you find at Downtown Core hawker operations or the airport-adjacent food options that most transiting visitors encounter.
The trade-off is logistics. Public transport access to Changi Village is workable, buses connect through Tampines and Pasir Ris, but the journey from central Singapore takes 45 to 60 minutes by public transit. Most visitors arrive by taxi or private hire, which reduces travel time considerably. Weekend visits should account for parking, as the property draws volume on Saturdays and Sundays from families and local residents treating it as a day-out destination rather than a quick dinner stop.
Where It Fits in Singapore's All-Day Dining Tier
Singapore's dining options across the price and format spectrum are worth mapping against The Coastal Settlement's position. At one end, the city's hawker tradition, represented by operations like KTMW in Bedok or Haidilao in Sembawang, offers high-frequency, low-price dining rooted in specific culinary traditions. At the other, Michelin-recognised tasting menus demand advance planning, formal commitment, and significant spend. The Coastal Settlement sits in the middle tier, where the proposition is atmosphere, occasion, and a broad menu rather than culinary precision.
This middle tier is intensely competitive in Singapore. The city has no shortage of heritage properties converted to lifestyle dining, and the format has become familiar enough that execution quality matters. Venues that hold their audience in this tier tend to do so through consistency, a strong sense of place, and a menu that evolves without abandoning its core register. Internationally, the model has parallels: Lazy Bear in San Francisco demonstrates how a distinctive hospitality format can define a venue as much as cooking, while operations like Little Italy Katong show how neighbourhood positioning shapes audience expectation locally.
For visitors building a Singapore itinerary, The Coastal Settlement is most usefully treated as a half-day excursion rather than a dinner reservation to plan around. The Changi Village setting rewards extended time: the coastline is walkable, the neighbourhood is worth exploring, and the venue's all-day format accommodates late brunches that stretch into afternoon drinks without pressure to turn tables. That rhythm is the point, and visitors who arrive expecting the focused dining experience of a place like Etna in Outram will find the comparison unhelpful.
For a broader view of Singapore's dining options across every price tier and neighbourhood, our full Singapore restaurants guide covers the city's range in detail, from street-level hawker finds to the tasting-menu tier that places Singapore among Asia's most recognised dining cities.
Planning a Visit
The Coastal Settlement is located at 200 Netheravon Road, Singapore 508529, in the Changi Village area. Given its distance from central Singapore, arriving by taxi or ride-hail is the most practical option for most visitors; from Orchard Road, expect a 25 to 35-minute drive outside peak hours. Weekend visits are popular with local families and draw higher volumes in the late morning through early afternoon; weekday visits offer a quieter version of the same space. The all-day format means visitors have flexibility that timed tasting menus at venues like more structured operations cannot offer.
Awards and Standing
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Coastal SettlementThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Local Fusion with Contemporary Twist | $$ | , | |
| Taste of the World | International A La Carte | , | Singapore | |
| Fortuna | Pizza | , | Singapore | |
| Nasi Lemak Ayam Taliwang Signature | Singaporean-Indonesian Nasi Lemak | $$ | , | Telok Ayer |
| Leopold | Austrian-German Gastropub | $$ | 1 recognition | BOAT QUAY |
| Ikkousha Ramen Chijmes | Hakata Tonkotsu Ramen | $$ | 1 recognition | CITY HALL |
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Cozy rustic atmosphere with nostalgic antique decor, lush garden surroundings, and relaxed lighting evoking old colonial days.














