Most discussions on skyscrapers focus on their iconography, symbolism, and how they function as ‘objects’ within the city—and that’s a mistake.
Too many times, the discourse on high-rises stops at the macro scale, which is a disservice to their stakeholders. Land-scarce Singapore cannot afford such a disservice, with 90 percent of its residents living in high-rise, high-density environments. Apart from shaping the urban fabric, these buildings must enrich the human experience of life in and around them.
In 2011, P&T Consultants won a competition to design the 702-unit Bartley Residences condominium. The site enjoyed two big advantages: its location at the fringes of Singapore’s city center and right next to an MRT Station. It also posed many challenges: a jagged, irregular shape; a busy, noisy road to its south; topography with a level difference of 18 meters from one end to the other; and, to top it all, a 147-year old Bodhi tree sitting precariously on the sloping terrain. The project was both design and construction challenge.
Managing scale, noise, views, and a 147-year old tree
Schemes that simply looked good on plan were cast aside when human factors were considered: minimizing east-west facing units, optimizing views, the avoidance of wall-like block buildings, and the creation of clearly defined residential clusters. In the end, the winning design was an exercise in establishing human scale. Rather than a single, over-scaled central space, the development would feature two interlinked common spaces, each creating friendlier residential clusters with their own distinct identity and character.
This story is from the October 2017 edition of BluPrint.
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This story is from the October 2017 edition of BluPrint.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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