Allen Law sees accessible clinics, science and shopping combined in his vision for a new era of everyday longevity.

When it comes to longevity, infrastructure is the new frontier; the sector is expanding into the spaces where people live, work and gather, and in doing so it is reshaping how prevention and healthspan are delivered. Clinics are no longer just consulting rooms, but anchors for communities; real estate is no longer simply bricks and mortar, but part of the ecosystem that nudges healthier choices and embeds daily engagement with wellbeing.

Singapore has been an early stage for this shift. The launch of Morrow with its US$156m backing showed how clinics can blend medical credibility with lifestyle design – but it is Longevity World that carries Allen Law’s larger ambition. Due to open in the second half of 2025, and planned as an 80,000 sq ft, three-storey hub in Singapore with a 38,000 sq ft clinic at its core, it is a mall of sorts but one where data, diagnostics and dinner all point in the same direction – seeking to make longevity accessible and practical, rather than abstract or elite. And Law wants to put them all under one roof.

Longevity.Technology: Accessibility is the nut that longevity has to crack. Precision diagnostics and cutting-edge therapies are advancing rapidly, but without models that bring them into the mainstream, the impact will remain niche. Allen Law’s vision of a “longevity mall” may sound glossy, but it speaks to a serious point: preventive health needs infrastructure, footfall and affordability as much as it needs biomarkers and AI. Malls changed the way we shop – could a new breed of malls change the way we age? If Longevity World succeeds, it won’t just democratize access to clinics and products – it could normalize daily engagement with healthspan, making it as routine as picking up groceries. That’s the sort of cultural shift the longevity sector needs if it is to move from aspiration to application.

Building the pillars of longevity

Allen Law, hotelier, investor and now longevity advocate, sees infrastructure as central to the future of healthspan. For him, the question of what makes a successful longevity hub has a simple starting point.

“For healthy longevity, the foundation is lifestyle medicine,” he says. “There are six key pillars [nutrition, exercise, stress management, sleep, avoidance of harmful substances, positive social connection]. These cut across everyone, no matter your genetics, family history, or exposure to disease.”

Law’s vision for Longevity World is to bring all of these pillars together in one place. “Some of the offerings will be service-oriented, some retail, some food and beverage,” he explains. “Different cultures also prioritize differently – Eastern versus Western approaches can vary – but our aim is to bring everything together into one hub.”

At the heart of that hub will be Morrow, the longevity clinic and lifestyle wellness center that will occupy half the space. Around it, Law intends to build a complementary ecosystem of providers and partners that makes the concept tangible, practical and, crucially, accessible.

Allen Law is the Founder of Seveno Capital and Longevity World Keeping science at the center

Law is quick to acknowledge that longevity medicine is still a young and fast-moving field, and that what is permitted varies considerably by jurisdiction. In Singapore, for example, therapies such as IV drips or stem cell treatments are not yet allowed, while in neighboring Thailand and Indonesia they are already part of clinical protocols.

“It’s not that those therapies have no scientific basis,” he says. “There is research, but the evidence often isn’t yet sufficient to fully endorse them, especially when benefits may only become visible after ten or twenty years.” Different countries weigh risk and reward differently, he explains, which is why regulations diverge.

For Law, however, the guiding principle is clear. “At Morrow, everything we do must be anchored in science,” he says. “We have our own scientific and medical team overseeing all offerings – from our head of lifestyle medicine to our head of health coaching, even our Chief Operating Officer. Every service is vetted through scientific and medical rigor before it becomes part of our program.”

How Seveno powers the plan

When it comes to making Longevity World a reality, Law’s role as founder of Seveno Capital means he can align investment strategy with his vision for accessible healthspan. He says the firm’s remit spans infrastructure, biotech and patient-facing services, but he distils it into two main buckets – both designed to feed into the hub.

“The first is real estate,” he explains. “We look at how to transform real estate to be more wellness-oriented – how cities, buildings and resorts can be designed to promote wellbeing.” Lifestyle is the foundation of longevity, he adds, so designing safe, supportive environments is an investment priority and underpins the Longevity World model.

The second bucket is intellectual property and research. “We work with scientists and researchers who have valuable IP but struggle to commercialize it,” Law says. “They may have strong lab results or promising science, but no platform to develop a proof of concept or bring it to market. Seveno creates that platform.”

He describes a process of identifying real-life problems and then asking whether a piece of science or IP can be applied to solve them. “If it can, we partner, provide funding, and support the scientist in building a commercial entity,” he says – giving researchers a platform to commercialise their IP in real-world situations that can ultimately feed into Longevity World. Seveno is committing SGD 25 million to the first phase of the project, with a further SGD 5 million allocated for a digital marketplace and second-phase expansion.

From clinics to community

Law says that while most longevity clinics today target the very wealthy, Longevity World is designed to broaden access. “Most clinics are serving the top five percent of the population,” he explains. “At Morrow, we asked ourselves: can we democratize longevity? Can we make it affordable for the middle fifty percent?”

He says the team began by researching Singapore’s median household income, then ran focus groups and market studies to determine what people could realistically pay for services. “We benchmarked ourselves at that level and then designed what we could deliver holistically, based on that price point,” he says. Unlike offerings pitched at the wealthiest one percent, Longevity World is explicitly positioned for Singapore’s middle class.

Technology is the lever that makes this possible. “We built an AI-powered app that acts as a 24/7 pocket health coach,” Law explains. Users can log meals with a quick photo, track exercise in real time, and link their behaviour to biomarker data. “If someone drinks a sugary beverage and their blood sugar spikes, the app can show that cause-and-effect directly,” he says. “Next time, they’ll think twice. The data empowers people to make smarter choices.”

Longevity World and Morrow are legally separate, but their philosophies align. “In Singapore they co-exist in the same location, but in future, Morrow may open without Longevity World, and Longevity World may open without Morrow,” Law says. “Sometimes they’ll overlap, sometimes not. If Morrow isn’t in a given site, we’ll invite another partner who shares the same philosophy and vision.”

The aim, he adds, is to create a kind of one-stop shop. “You could see a clinician, then buy the right food, supplements, or gym equipment – all in the same place,” Law says. “And beyond the physical hub, we’re building an e-commerce platform like an Amazon or Lazada, but focused only on longevity and wellness products.”

The difference, he stresses, is in the reviews. “They won’t come from random users or influencers. They’ll come from scientists and researchers,” Law says. “It’s almost like a Michelin Guide for longevity products.”

Mall good things come to those who wait

Looking ahead, Law says he wants Longevity World to expand to many more locations over the next decade, making it accessible to a broad population rather than a niche elite. “Too much of what people hear about longevity comes from influencers instead of doctors or scientists,” he says. “Consumers can be misled, and sometimes that can be dangerous.”

He sees Longevity World as the antidote: a trusted platform where people can access science-backed services and products, speak with professionals, and learn how to engage with their own healthspan journey. “Everything we offer must be safe and supported by science,” Law says. “That’s how we create value not only for patients, but also for science and for the broader economy.”

Considering what Longevity World might feel like a decade from now, Law doesn’t hesitate. “I’d want people to walk into a space where every part of healthy living is available,” he says. Food is the first thing he mentions: fast but healthy outlets alongside restaurants serving different cuisines, all aligned with a nutritious diet.

Exercise is next: multiple workout zones for yoga, Pilates, strength training and endurance sports. “It should be highly engaging, with many options,” he says. A medical wing would round out the offer, providing diagnostics, consultations and treatments, all underpinned by scientific evidence.

Community is critical, Law adds. At Morrow, he is introducing shared medical appointments – common in the West, but new in Singapore – where patients with similar conditions see a doctor together. “Someone who is shy may learn from another person’s questions,” he explains. “And afterwards, they can support each other as peers.”

Peer support helps maintain motivation, but it also helps reduce costs. “A private one-to-one consultation is always more expensive,” Law says. “If five people share a session, the cost drops immediately.” AI adds another layer, enabling professionals to support far more clients than before while keeping services personalized. “A health coach who once managed 20 clients can now handle five or even ten times that number with AI support,” Law explains.

Law envisions Longevity World as engaging, affordable, science-backed and community-driven – a place where people can practice every aspect of healthy living under one roof. That shift from hype to evidence, from aspirational wellness to grounded healthspan, is what he hopes the model will embody.

As he puts it: “We want people to come, spend the day with us, and find everything they need for their healthspan journey. That’s the change we are working towards.”

Photographs courtesy of Allen Law / Seveno Capital