Making it New

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habitus | Issue 01

cross fade emerald hill house — singapore

RICHARD HO

MAKING it new I When Singapore belatedly began to value its built heritage, the traditional shophouse suddenly became much sought-after with some stunning make-overs. Richard Ho, a specialist in conservation projects, previously carried out a beautiful renovation to a shophouse in Penang. Darlene Smyth looks at an equally elegant one in Singapore.

Intense sunlight washes evenly over the meticulously crafted moldings, fluted columns and finely detailed glazed tiles of this conservation terrace house. The lack of shadows cast by the diffused tropical sun seems to flatten the otherwise three-dimensional, intricate façade, telling us we are in Singapore. Standing in the carved timber doorway, sheltered by the recessed common walkway that runs down the entire stretch of row houses that the locals call the “five foot way” stands the architect, Richard Ho, ready to unveil to us the multi-layered mystery of the deep recesses within. This recently renovated historical terrace house, at 58 Emerald Hill Road was originally developed in the early 1900s when it was neighbouring a nutmeg plantation. Today, the street finds itself a stone’s throw away from the bustling shopping district of Orchard Road. No stranger to renovation projects on this street as well as various other housing conservation pockets around Singapore, Richard Ho, who founded RichardHO Architects in 1991 is a designer that one cannot help but respect. Having devoted his career to his unflinching architectural philosophy of conservation, he has now accrued an oeuvre of nearly 40 conservation projects. The lasting appeal of his architecture can be said to be due to his approach to the conservation terrace house, one of the most indigenous architectural typologies of Singapore. “I have a strong sense that we live in the now, and we should not be replicating history,” he says. “We cannot turn the house into a museum, but at the same time I don’t want the houses to feel like they are in New York or London. Each house should have a sense of place.” Having grown up in Singapore, Ho carries with him the collective memories imbued in the forms, spaces and uses of the long, deep terrace house typology. His architecture is careful not to re-create this history, but to introduce modern facilities and use into the house while retaining the experiential qualities of the old. The act of stepping through the doorway of the house evokes one of these experiential qualities. The transition from the bright, sun-flooded external to the intimate, narrow and more dimly lit interior marks the passage of space as well as time. The quality of space and light shifts dramatically from outside to inside. The warm hues of the exposed timber joists and timber ceiling panels in the entrance foyer seem to abruptly compress the space, emphasised here by dark timber cabinetry on both of the solid side

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Text Darlene Smyth

Photography Albert Lim


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