The RFP for the 29,332-square-foot wealthmanagement center called for out-of-the-box thinking and a fresh, world-class experience. The firm won with its “banking conservatory” concept, notes MOD founder and director Colin Seah. His idea stemmed from the site, a 36-foot-high atrium in a 2014 building by Raymond Woo & Associates Architects, as well as the notion that a conservatory is where something is grown, nurtured, and protected—an interesting analogy for wealth. Plus, Singapore has long billed itself as a garden city. Working with ICN Design landscape architects, four acoustically sealed meeting pods form luxe cocoons amid myriad plants in different heights and textures, including betel nut palms, arums, and Boston ferns, arrayed in gold-tinted stainless-steel planters, uplit at night by LED strips. Like houses, each skylit pod has its own mechanical, electric, and sprinkler system as well as a set of leathercovered Henrik Pedersen chairs. “For the mental well-being of the employees, we made the office areas an extension of the conservatory,” Seah says of the hub’s three other floors. Curvilinear hot desks wrap around evergreens, wood-look vinyl flooring brings warmth, and a smart lighting system matches circadian rhythms, bright in the morning and cool toward evening. —Rebecca Dalzell PROJECT TEAM: COLIN SEAH; JOYCE LOW; RUTH CHONG; COLIN APPLETON; FON LERTRATTANAKIT; FAI SUVISITH; NAMRATA MEHTA; NONG CHOTIPATOOMWAN; JUSTIN LU; ZHANG HANG; KEVIN LEONG; CHIANG SZE MAY; RICHARD HERMAN; RAIS RAHMAN; TASMINAH ALI; AZILAWATI WANTI; IQBAL YUSOF; MAGGIE LEK.
ministry of design Citi Wealth Hub, Singapore
KHOOGJ
be stofyear finance office JAN.22
INTERIOR DESIGN
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