Jurong Town Hall was first announced in December 1968, with the
Jurong Town Corporation (JTC) planning to set aside for the building among other projects summing to . In April 1969, the JTC hosted a design competition for the building, with 34 entries by October. Local architectural company Team 3 won the competition in December. In February 1971, it was announced that Jurong Town Hall would be part of spent by the JTC on spillover projects. In the same month, the JTC started calling on tenders with experiences in constructing multi-million dollar office projects and unlimited class in building works for the construction of the Jurong Town Hall. During that time, it was estimated that the building construction would cost . Construction began later in May, with
piling works already done and expected completion in January 1973. By December, JTC claimed that the Jurong Town Hall along with a shopping complex were "the biggest and the most prestigious [projects] planned for
Jurong so far", with Jurong Town Hall's cost being . In January 1972, its cost was . In the same month, it was announced that operations in the JTC would be transferred from its headquarters in Yung Kuang Road to Jurong Town Hall by early next year, though some departments like the Estates Department would remain for convenience. At a ceremony on 23 February 1973 officiated by then-Minister for Finance
Hon Sui Sen, a
time capsule containing memorabilia of Jurong between 1960 and 1973 was buried and intended to be open by 2001. By March, the building was nearly complete. In August 1974,
Indonesian President Suharto along with his wife
Tien Suharto visited the building since they were interested in the "Jurong success story". An eight-people
Indonesian parliamentary delegation led by Deputy Speaker
Mohammad Isnaeni also visited the building for lunch. The
Shah of Iran and
Empress Farah also visited the building a month later. ==Tenants of Trade Association Hub (TA Hub)==