DESIGN STUDIO
ERIK G L’HEUREUX
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
DESIGN STUDIO
ERIK G L’HEUREUX
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
AR5103, AY 2013/2014
M.ARCH 2, SEMESTER 1
GOH WEIXIANG
XU LANJUN
QUEK JIA YAN SAMANTHA
LEE XIAO LING LYNN
CHEONG WAN YING
ATREYEE SANDILYA
MAYURA PATIL
CHEN JIAHUI
LI JINMU
ERICA CHAN
HENG CHEN SIN
EPIPHANIE BARLI LIE
ONG WEE JIN
AMANDA WONG
LIANE EE
PENNY NG
TAN QIAN ROU
ESTELLE SIM
FU ZHUO JOE
SHI YANJIE
MARISA KUEH LI NA
LAN YIKANG
GEE MING WEI
CHONG WEN JIN
YEO KIA LENG ADELENE
JASON TAN
JOEL TAY GUANG HUA
AZIZUL IZWAN B ROSLAN
PEH SZE KIAT IVEN
GRETA VARPUCIANSKYTE
NICHOLAS GOMES
NI CHIA MIN
LEOW CHENG TING ANTHONY
DEPARTMENT OF ARCHITECTURE
SCHOOL OF DESIGN AND ENVIRONMENT
NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF SINGAPORE
THE ARCHITECTURE OF INFORMAL LANDSCAPES
p.06
RemediatingBaseco’sCoast
p.07
Post-disasterTansitionalSettlement
p.08
TheSocialAmalgamationProject
p.09
ResilientAmphibiousTerritoryReconstucting
Regenerationthrough SustenanceSecurity
SINGAPORE METROPOLITAN REGION AND THE ARCHITECTURE OF BORDERS
p.11
StoneAppreciation:BiophilicCenterWithaJourney ofSense
Pirkology
p.12
UnitedStraits:AJourneytoUnity StraitsofJohor
p.13
AquaLines
p.14-15
Neighboursheds
LandThievess
THE ARCHITECTURE OF ATMOSPHERES
p.17
50CentimetersperSecond
TropicalplazaforaPedestrianCulture
p.18
AerodynamicPorousArchitectureRethinkingUrban ResidentialTypologies
MarineX
p.19
ClimaticLink-way:JustapositionoftheBackAlleys
SensoryWaterscape:IntegratingWaterinthe UrbanContext
p.20
TheVeiledChandelier
PulauJubin(Ubin) GraniteIsland/‘chieosuar’
p.21
Trinity
DualExoskeletons
p.22
OrchidR&DandExport
BiomedicalStrip
p.23
ToTheLighthouse
NEW MODES OF READING
p.25
HeadinthePointClouds-FeetontheGround
TheProblemofThermalComfortinClimaticDesign
p.26
UrbanEcologicalResearchinSingapore
CoolLivingHeritageinQatar
ThermalModernityandArchitecture
p.27
BuildingShadeAffectsLightEnvironmentand UrbanGreeneryinHigh-densityResidentialEstates inSingapore
PhotosyntheticallyActiveRadiationand ComparisonofMethodsforitsEstimationin EquatorialSingapore
p.28
PassiveLowEnergyArchitecture(PLEA) Conference
InternationalConferenceofUrbanClimate(ICUC9)
Seminar:University ofNavarra
SolarDeclathon
UniversityofFlorida
p.29
WheelwrightPrizePresentationandWinner
p.30
03-FLATS
p.31
TropicalPockets
ThermalDelightinArchitecture
p.32-37
Publications
p.38-41
Events
Climate+Territory
of Architecture
School of Design and Environment
National University of Singapore
4 Architecture Drive, Singapore 117566 Tel: +65 6516 3452
ISBN: XXX-XXX-XX-XXXX-X
© Individual Contributors
Front Cover by: Erik G. L’Heureux
All rights reserved; no part of this publication may be reproduced,storedinaretrievalsystem,ortransmittedinany form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without prior written permission of the publisher.
The publisher does not warrant or assume any legal responsibility for the publication’s contents. All opinions expressedinthebookareoftheauthorsanddonotnecessarily reflect those of the National University of Singapore.
A by-product of hardwork, sweat is hot, slippery, and sometimes smelly. It is the consequence of the friction between physical exertion as well as the conditions of our climate. Living on the equator creates a special relationship with sweat—we secrete it after mere few minutes being outside. Indeed, it is what defines tropical living with all of its pleasure and occasional annoyance.
The Climate+Territory Design Section at the Department of Architecture at NUS illustrates its own sweat in this simple pamphlet. The intent is to make visible the questions of architecture and landscape that keep us awake and thinking late at night while we navigate the massively changing territories of South East Asia.
The work is rudimentary, the pamphlet a collage, the designs inchoate. But the ambition is clear and simple: to render visible the sweat in the Climate+Territory design section to thepublic,withthehopeandpromisethatfutureworkwillget better, more articulate, and more refined.
Erik G. L’Heureux Climate + Territory Design Section LeaderThe Climate + Territory Design Section focuses design and research efforts on the relationship between environment, territory, and urban architecture locatedinthehotandwettropicalregionsofSouthEastAsia.Effortsaredirectedparticularlytowardstheinterfacebetweenthemediumsintheconstruction of architecture and landscape: atmosphere, water, land-form, nature, and buildings that constitute the hot and wet Asian Mega-City. Theresearchambitionistodeveloprobustdesignstrategiesthatincorporatethenaturalandbuiltenvironmentasacohesiveandcomplexwholewithinthe contexts of rapid population growth, social and material inequalities, and cultural and global identity in a tropical territory of rapid change.
The Climate + Territory Design Section has ten unique design academics with cross-disciplinary expertise and interests. Their individual foci include architecture, urban planning, landscape architecture, history and theory. Students benefit not only from the rigorous and lively debate within the Climate+Territory Design Section but also from the faculty’s extensive networks in South East Asia. Past collaborations include design research located in Manila, Jakarta, Bangkok, Mumbai, Cambodia, Johor and Batam with partner institutions including the FCL/ETH Zurich, Tongji University, Pratt University and Washington University in St. Louis.
Faculty:
Erik G. L’Heureux
Oscar Carracedo
Abel Tablada
Chang Jiat Hwee
Teh Kem Jin
Tomohisa Miyauchi
Rafaella Sini
Joerg Rekittke
Hwang Yun Hye
Tan Puay Yok
In Manila, one of the most rapidly growing megacities, nearly one-third of its population suffers from poverty and the lowest employment rate in the Philippines. This lack of basic livelihood needs for low-income people is in contrast with the rising property values of Manila as a ‘global hub’. Situated on 57 hectares of reclaimed land off Manila Bay, which is only 5 km from the city center, Baseco has been regarded as home for 47,000 urban poor immigrants, includingthefirstofficialslumrelocationsiteunderanationalinitiative“OutofPoverty” that was established in 1986. Settlements are displaced as a result of the floodprone and polluted lands, and a lack of land resources give rise to a high degree of financial dependency along with limited social and economic opportunities.
The thesis is a response to the current planning and design strategies in postdisaster transitional houses in Japan in which only constructional and safety considerations are taken. This may lead to the extension and worsening of the emotional health of survivors after a disaster.
A prototype of a transitional temporary settlement is then projected for the northern region of Japan. The aim of the design proposal is to explore the potential of architecture and community planning to go beyond the provision of fourwallsforshelteringandstorageofpeople,hence,tobeadrivertomanipulate the environment and human sensation in order to enhance emotional recovery after a disaster.
Conflicting and difficult-to-measure aspects like soul-nourishing, emotional and psychological well-being, social interaction versus isolation, public and privacy perception, and healthy and healing spaces are core in the design process by the creation of a matrix which account for the type of family nucleus and their needs. However, other utilitarian considerations like the use of low technology, quick, efficient and cheap material and construction are also considered in the establishment of a catalogue of predesigned modules that can be configured for many different sites and needed programs.
Mumbai exhibits a good deal more informal settlers than formal residents. The city has been built on an urban peninsula geographically constrained by the sea. One of the most interesting characteristics of Mumbai is its obvious and self confident acquiescence of a kind of architectural anti-image generation. Most likely there are not many places in the world where large-scale poverty, informal city growth, societal separation and heedless class mentality are more visible and forthright than in Mumbai. At daytime all these busy servants smartly move within decent neighbourhoods and living environments, at night they return to their customary housing type – the genuine slum. No private ‘employer’ in Mumbai would gaynsay or bemoan this – and we, on our part, deliberately abstain from any moralizing.
We work on a design study that we baptised the Social Amalgamation Experiment (Mumbai). We try to develop a vision for novel housing typologies that can accommodate those who are able to afford good quality housing and those who work for this propertied class. In our fieldwork and analysis we focussed on historical and modern mass housing types such as chawls from 19th century and recent buildings by the city’s Slum Rehabilitation Authority – as well as on the eye-catchingcontrastbetweenthefasthorizontalgrowthofinformalsettlements for the poor and the rapid vertical growth of housing types for high-income residents.
In November 2013, Typhoon Haiyan struck portions of Southeast Asia and left the Philippines particularly devastated. Typhoon Haiyan affected 14 million Filipinos, killing approximately 6,300 people and displacing more than 6 million residents. One of the harshest-hit areas of this disaster is the City of Tacloban in the Eastern Visayas region.
Tacloban is the capital city of the province of Leyte and was developed from a small fishing village to what it is today – major economic drivers of the city are its portandfishingindustry.ThelethaleffectsoftheTyphonsawhomes,communities andpublicinfrastructuresinTaclobandestroyedanddamaged.Livelihoodswere alsodisrupted.Consequently,thecityfacedmassivehumanitariancrisissuchas, lack of shelter, food, clean water and medical supplies. The strong storm surges of Typhoon Haiyan also destroyed the port and crippled the fishing industry and its economy.
Leow Cheng Ting Anthony (M Arch\ Assistance Professor Oscar Carracedo)Slums and squatters are the by-products of rapid urbanization in developing countries.Mumbai,transformingfromafishingvillagetonowtheeconomiccapital of India, best represents the territorial conflict between centralized developments and autonomous settlements. Although the stem of urban informal settlement is a manifestation of inadequate provision of affordable housing, solution to emphasize the “efficiency” of direct housing provision should not overpower the importance of such “effectiveness”. While more than half of the population in Mumbai is living in such unsatisfactory condition, fully reliance on either government or private investors to achieve a replicable model of rehabilitation is unrealistic.
Underanassumedcooperativeframeworkamonggovernment,privateinvestors and slum dwellers, and architects/architecture, this thesis uses Kumbharwada, a pottery village in Dharavi as a proposal for concept change and shift in practice to balance the redevelopment. Instead of providing a “complete but useless house”, a “functional module” is proposed to facilitate and catalyse an autonomous redevelopment that has been observed. In contrast to the convention onesize-fit-allsolution,thedesignstrategydevelopedseveraldeviceswhichreactto specific conditions in micro scale and aims to reconcile the diverse needs from within.
“It was a thing as tremendous as the universe—the laws and ways of its working no more than the universe to be questioned or understood.”
The contract between humans and food; humans and animals; and Singapore and her hinterland is wrought with ethical, political, and spatial dimensions. This thesis uses architecture and spatial strategies as means for checks and balancestoincreasetheinteractionandvisualconnectionsbetweenpeopleand livestock animals so that the operations behind food provision and private enterprise are made accountable not only to the state but also to the public.
Published in SA Magazine #287
Design Intent: to get people to learn more about ubin’s industrial heritag through the celebration & appreciation of stones
Design Concept: to celebrate the appreciation of stones by engaing human’s 5 senses: touch, smell, sight, sound & taste
Design Strategy: to create an architecture that will act as a backdrop to bring out the beauty & essence of the stones
Inspiration: design for this biophilic centre is inspired by sculptor, pinuccio sciola’s, works, where he carved stones to create music, making something “dead” come “alive”
Epiphanie Barli Lie (MArch\ Associate Professor Erik L’Heureux) Heng Chen Sin (M Arch\ Senior Lecturer Tomohisa Miyauchi)Ong Wee Jin (MArch\ Associate Professor Erik L’Heureux)
CitycoresofSingaporeandIskandarmergeviaanextensivenetworkofsurface and sub-terranean links. Access from one to another is direct and convenient, served by adequate and expansive infrastructures of road and rail alike.
At the center of all this lies the strait as an emerging third space, the binder of once divided soverignities. A softer union can be read as having always been present - the geographical basin formation that feeds into the strait.
A singular thriving hub. Highly connected, highly supported. City cores of Singapore and Iskandar merge via an extensive network of surface and subterranean links. Access from one to another is direct and convenient, served by adequate and expansive infrastructures of road and rail alike.
The Johor Strait is re-conceptualised not as a dividing line of tension but rather a unifying territory and a liquid asset. Its fingers reach into both sides and bind them as one. It shifts from being a barrier to glue.
AseriesofbarragesareimplementedatstrategicpointsalongthewesternStrait. These double up as four additional crossings put in place between the current Tuas and Woodlands causeways. Key economic activities and ecosystems such asthePasirGudangPortandPulai/JohorRiversareleftrelativelyuninterrupted.
InSingapore,thestateconsciouslyandcontinuouslydeniesitscitizensofaccess to the sea. The central metaphor of an island is erased by the state’s prodigious land reclamation, and subsequent denial to the sea. Most of the island’s edges are cordoned off by massive sea walls or owned by the state for economic development.In addition to the formation of a clean territory, the hard edge also amplifies divide, leaving small point of porosity between the land and sea. This thesis is interested in studying these last interfaces, these liquid territories that connect land and sea.
The built environment is systematically cleaned, maintained and replaced as a form of resistance towards tropical forces of decay. The “architecture of leaks”, in this regard, operates like a form of parasitic-growth, that allows the island to purge itself of waste and water. It carves, diverts and tunnels, aggressively altering the landscape, creating a network of infrastructural territory that is untouched by any other form.
This infrastructure serves primarily as a form of resistance towards climatic conditions, to control and overcome tropical forces such as rain and floodwater for short periods, and divert its forces into the sea. It latches onto the natural and the built alike, becoming an essential part of its survival against the tropical forces. This form of architectural infrastructure is thus crucial in creating a “sterilized and clean” environment on which we build and live.
The series studies the “architecture of leaks”, creating a taxonomy varying from transport, conveyance, diversion to filtration. Multiple systems connect and to one another to form an intricate web of systems. However, with the extensive amount of roughly 200 ongoing and upcoming projects, this system is bound to experience points of splintering, where connecting points become disjointed or incoherent.
A watershed is conventionally known as an area of land that captures and drains water to a common point of discharge. It is a system where topography governs the flow of water through the landscape. Against an increasingly urbanized world, however, it is evident that this traditional notion of the watershed has not been displaced fast enough or far enough to accommodate human activity. In many cities today, the urban environment and watershed are two distinct territories, linked together by a series of pipe networks. The urban grid and site design bears no semblance to the actual natural watershed.
My thesis seeks to define a new form of watershed, using the concept of “neighboursheds”–atermIusetodescribeaneighbourhood-basedwatershed. Eachneighbourshedisdefinedbytheperimetersofaneighbourhoodcommunity andhasitsowngrammarofcollectingandmanagingwater.Strategiesemployed aresite-specificcalibrationstothedifferentfinancial,topographicalandpollution realities in each neighbourshed. The “neighboursheds” scheme is a system of distributed water infrastructure located at the community level. It intermediates between two extreme scales in Batam’s urban water system – the large, highlycentralized city reservoirs and the small, household level of domestic wells.
The direction of this thesis emerged from the research that delves into territorial disputes between formal developments and the existing informal habitations.
Like the situation in Kampung Skudai kiri, the ferocious erection of towers along the coast creates a Duo city tension that contrasts the Iskandar masterplan with the sprawling nature of Johor Bahru. The existing masterplan’s zoning and programming methodology denies the city’s nature of informal growth.
Therefore, through architectural form, the project takes on the position to manifest the open-system originally present in the sprawling nature of JB, and todesignarobustpieceofthecitythatchallengesthetraditionalwayofplanning (zones and programs), which sees any form of informal growth as a threat to the city’s formal structure.
Theprojectfocusesontherelationshipbetweennatureandthecity,usingnature as the tool to weave the ecologies of urban fabrics into a cohesive whole. The threads are not only physical, but more importantly, are the spirit(s) of the site, history, heritage, religions, cultures.
We consult with the spirit of water for the project to reconcile how life is possible with the existence of water on the planet earth. The proposing Museum of Water in Singapore is to facilitate and promote such understanding and hydrophilicity (a strong affinity for water) among people of different backgrounds.
Dhoby Ghaut-Bras Basah
Dominance of vehicular traffic, particularly in fast-paced cities, has become prevalent over the years and Singapore is no exception. Hence pedestrians become subservient to motorised vehicles, resulting in spatial fragmentation that compromises the accessibility of public spaces for pedestrian activity. The thesis seeks to explore an alternative approach to designing public spaces for a more vibrant and pedestrian friendly urban environment, suited for the tropical conditions and site characteristics – The Tropical Plaza.
Thethesisproposalpushesthenotionofacentraltropicalurbannode,equipped with public facilities to catalyse various urban events and festivals while still accommodating the circulation of motorised vehicles. Located in central Dhoby Ghaut-Bras Basah precinct, the site was chosen for its high vehicular and pedestrian traffic and proximity to major cultural institutions, each with its own series of cultural events that occur throughout the year.
The project seeks an alternative design of the Bidadari town centre with the primaryaimofpromotingthermallycomfortablesemi-openspacesbyimproving natural ventilation in a series of interconnected zones with different degrees of openness.
Given the complexity of the building program, the project focuses on the explorationandmanipulationofpossiblemorphologiesthroughtheinteractionof thehighlypermeablepodiumlevelwiththeresidentialtowersandthesurrounding buildings and natural assets.
The geometrical and morphological variations were partially guided throughout the whole design progression by a series of Computational Fluid Dynamics simulations without minimizing the importance of functional and aesthetics and other environmental considerations.
Theprojectimpetusisledbyaseriesofpragmaticmotives.Aswithcoastalcities worldwide, Singapore is vulnerable to the consequences of climate change. An imminent sea level rise renders permanent inundation. Heavier precipitation directs ever larger areas of land to water drainage and peak overflow storages. Existing island topography and increasing human population result in a shortageofnewbuildinglandforcityexpansion.Progressivelargescalecoastal reclamation induces adverse effects on the marine environment.
As MarineX designs, constructs and launches floating resorts, the architecture advances the concept of prefabricating buildings on water and capitalises on humanscalefloatationtechnologytoestablishmarinefootprints,withtheultimate goal of enabling people to live on aquatic territories. Production comprises incubatorsforresearch&development,anassemblylineandpontoonfabrication chamber while Exposition exhibits a range of resolution from individual to single and multi-family units.
The initiative creates a new paradigm in conceiving flexible spaces with the vision of living on water transforming into reality in phases progressively.
Singapore
As a critique to the unsustainable nature of daily operations of a city, the thesis propose an urban link-way that exposes its users to the realities of the operation of a city by juxtaposing the heavy pedestrianized link way onto the back alleys and at the same time intensifying these back alleys which are the manifestations of climatic sustainability issues of a city.
By allowing water to inspire and guide an architectural project and its programs, a more synchronised integration between water and the urban context can be generated. The regard for water as an element would allow users to experience and be conscious of importance of water. This thesis aims to explore the possibilities offered by the pliable nature of water and probe for the potential to improve the relationship with water in order to realize the “wedding between water and urban space.” Architectute becomes a mediation to augment and enrich environmental education in Singapore with the introduction of water’s vitality into the urban public spaces of everyday life in Singapore.
The transformation of John Graham’s AIA Building is one of a climactic exterior as well as a contrasting interior. The gradated stretch and twist of the envelope reacts to the solar path resulting in an East-West impenetrability and a NorthSouth porosity. This gradient mitigates the tower’s overall solar exposure by densely shading the upper levels that receive more solar radiation and opens up the lower to allow in more light and air. The relentlessness of its employment goes to the extent of concealing the entrance, therein creating the effect of the veil. Interior air-conditioned spaces are incrementally recessed towards the lower levels to further mitigate spatial heat gain - naturally ventilated spaces consequentially increase. The glassed volumes are hung from primary floor slabs and seem to descend from above creating the effect of the chandelier.
Landscape Focus Design Studio (Year 3\ Assistant Professor Rafaella Sini )
The exercise used a number of tools necessary to engage in a critical reading of context: techniques of representation such as mapping, sketching, comparative visual analysis are explored, to conceptualize, imagine and convey the complex, layered landscape strata, its range of interpretation and possibilities.
The elevation is composed of three main envelope: the ‘outer’, the ‘inner’ and the ‘non-structural’. The ‘outer’ is made up of alternating rows of light shelves and tablestoallowdiffusedlightandkeepoutdirectsunlight.The‘inner’iscomposed of triangular folds that act as sunshades, keeps the rain out and directs the view downwards.The‘non-structural’envelopessportadiscontinuousverticalelement segmented by rows of light shelves. The depth of each envelope is calibrated by their positions on the inside-outside and east-west direction. Despite the difference, The three elevations are read as a unified whole characterized by their vertical elements, proportions and materiality.
The diagrid structural exterior directs the load to the envelope. The definition of envelope is usually accompanied with preconceptions such as surface, boundary, shell, skin or façade. In order to push the interpretation of envelope, firstly, a secondary filigree structure is devised as the envelope for the existing building and the structure for the new addition. Secondly, instead of viewing the envelope as a surface, this endoskeleton is a volume within a volume (the exoskeleton). In order to accentrate the secondary volume, circulation cores are carefully positioned between the outer and inner envelopes. Lastly, the envelope becomes a form of inhabitation.
L’Heureux)Joel Tay Guang Hua and Azizul Izwan B Roslan (Year 4\ Associate Professor Erik L’Heureux)The 2030 vision aims to integrate industry, demographics, and nature through being sensitive to the side of Jurong Hill. The sales of orchids is a large global market, and Singapore in particular is one of the largest exporters or orchids in the world. A programme of hotels and service apartments, together with exhibition spaces and educational facilities, are proposed to complement the business.R&Dfacilitiesaidinimprovingtheworkflowofproduction,andthisties in with the educational intent of promoting nature. Through this, an urban realm is created for the otherwise contained orchid export industry, to allow the public to learn and gain appreciation for orchids, Jurong Hill and nature. This public space is the orchid nurseries, located at the breezeways of the project whereby windfrombothdirectionsismanipulatedwithascreen.Thenurseriesalsoactas a filter for the industrieal N-E wind.
The 2030 Jurong Biomedical Strip is an integrated facility that is situated to the south of Jurong Hill. It seeks to explore a new building cluster typology that combines the verticalitu of Mixed Use Developments with the industrial concept ofBench-To-Bedthatcanallowforintegrationonthehorizontalaxis.Byallowing better ventilation conditions, the wind strategies applied on the masterplan level helped to activate key urban nodes allowing this development to not only be an innovative place to work in, but also a comfortable and ideal place to live in.
The idea of the fragment- of memory and image, as being more powerful than the actual entity of the lighthouse reflects the sort of territorial identity which can be discerned from Pedra Branca. Horsburgh Lighthouse, much as the lighthouse in Woolf’s description, becomes primarily empowered through a collective cultural image. The lighthouse becomes significant because it is a allegory; of place-memory, of familial relationships, of growth, and of territory. It acquires
importance beyond itself because of the narrative that is used to perceive it, and thus in turn becomes a tool to engage concepts which concern those narratives. Horsburgh Lighthouse hence becomes an allegory to describe not only Singaporean territory, but the role of architecture in territorialisation as well.
Named for Woolf’s novel, this thesis demonstrates through the same starting point of a lighthouse that architecture is not only a tool to territorialise, but that through instances of image, representation and the allegory, multiple territorial definitions may be ascribed to architecture. In its endeavours, this scheme looks to the lighthouse for both architectural and territorial context; in doing so, suggests a structure which is simultaneously architecture and territory. Where for Woolf the image becomes the architecture, for the thesis, the image becomes the architecture, becomes the territory.
Tan Qian Rou (M Arch\ Assistance Professor Lilian Chee and Zdravko Trivic)New Modes of Reading and Research
Thereisnoneedforsoothsayerstopredictthefutureofdigitaltechnologyforthe purpose of site-specific landscape architectural terrain analysis, measurement, and documentation. It will be handheld, respectively mobile and light, broadly affordable,andwillallowdigitallandscapecaptureintheformofthree-dimensional data progressively in high precision, high density, and geo-referenced manner. Landscapedataofthatilk,whichemanatefromhigh-capacitydepthcamerasas well as terrestrial laser scanners, can be made available with high visual clarity and aesthetic allure. A common result of the capture technique is their interim, respectively final transformation into point clouds, contingent upon their way of generation,purposeandapplication.Pointcloudsofeveryoccurrenceandscale at present become the most relevant digital slug as well as virtual modelling clay of the landscape architectural design discipline. With our heads in the point clouds, operating as research-oriented landscape architects in the context of academic design projects, we insist upon the necessity of working in situ and putting our feet on the ground.
This axiom enables us to do fieldwork in undocumented or data-poor megaurban environments, often under the urban canopy and in urban canyons where remote sensing technology fails to act. We experiment with all sorts of independentmeasuringandurbanterraindatagatheringtechnologythatcanbe carriedinthefield.Wecontinuetoadvocatethecreativeutilisationofinexpensive, ordinary tools and off-the-shelf technology. Having said that, the grasp at more sophisticated, more expensive, and more flamboyant technology remained appealingduringthepastyearsofourresearch.Whensuchcostlystate-of-theart technology became available to our university department, we took them to harsh megacity environments and tested their capacities and limits. This move signified a review of the theses and methods inherent to our general concept of Grassroots GIS – inclusive surprises and reassurances. For example, working in crowded informal narrow city layouts makes operations with laser-beam emitting terrain scanners Gordian. While the use of unmanned aerial vehicles carrying powerful cameras does not always have to end admissibly. These are the moments when the reliability of mature and frugal technology, as well as improvisation and tinkering skills, may steal the show.
Published in Peer Reviewed Proceedings of Digital Landscape Architecture 2014 at ETH Zurich. 198-207.
Buildings are responsible for a large percentage of the record levels of energy consumption and carbon emission in the Anthropocene epoch, and significant proportion of these are associated with mechanical cooling. In face of peak oil and climate change, many advocates are calling for a reduction in our reliance on mechanical cooling and for us to turn to non-air-conditioning technologies. For many architects, historians and theorists, not only do mechanical cooling (as provided by air-conditioning) and “natural” cooling (through sun-shading and ventilation)representcontrastingtechnologiesandphilosophies,thearchitectural formsassociatedwiththesetechnologiesarealsoseenasdiametricallyopposed physical and cultural entities: productform versus placeform, active cooling in contrast to passive cooling, conservative mode against selective mode, etc.
This paper questions these oppositions. Examining the emerging discourse of tropical architecture in the British imperial contexts of the 1950s and 1960s, this paper argues that, like mechanically cooled architecture, tropical architecture was underpinned by a mechanistic and reductionist understanding of the complex relationships between human well-being, climate and society. Looking at the research and teaching by figures such as Otto Koenigsberger and George Atkinson at the Department of Tropical Architecture at the AA and the various Building Research Stations in the British Empire, this paper shows that thermal comfort, as established in early twentieth century by the airconditioning researchers associated with ASHVE and industrial physiologists, was the “fundamental principle” upon which tropical architecture was constructed. Thermal comfort experiments, however, assumed human beings as passive biological receptacles of environmental stimuli and reinforced the old colonial perception that tropical climate was a source of thermal stress. Thus, tropical architecture ignored how comfort was not an environmental-biological attribute but an achievement inextricably linked to social practices and cultural perceptions. The subsequent failure of tropical architecture can be attributed to these oversights.
Presented at “Architectural History of the Anthropocene” session, Society of Architectural Historians Annual Conference April 2015 in Chicago.
ThedrasticchangesinthenaturalenvironmentofSingaporefromthebeginning of recorded settlements to the present day present numerous opportunities for understandinghowurbanizationhasaffectedtheecologyoftheislandcity-state. On the one hand, the almost complete clearing of the original tropical lowland forests and the ensuing catastrophic extinction of the original biodiversity, suggest how cities ought to avoid the same developmental pathway. On the other hand, the relatively high percentage of vegetation cover that the city has achieved due to effective urban greening policies suggest that opportunities still exist to restore functions associated with a healthy urban ecosystem. This paper reviewed urban ecological research on Singapore conducted between 1991 and 2012, and summarized the key findings according to the state factors of an urban ecosystem. The review showed that the large majority of the studies were focused on biodiversity, and were on the ecology in a city. It revealed gaps in urban ecological knowledge of Singapore, especially in relation to how studies
Published in Landscape and Urban Planning 125 (2014): 271-289.
Interdisciplinary team: Prof.TimWinter,DeakinUniversity(leadPI),Dr.TrinidadRico,TexasA&MUniversityQatar(Co-leadPI),Prof.DonaldMcNeill,UniversityofWesternSydney, Dr. Russell Hitchings, University College London, Dr. Jiat-Hwee Chang, National University of Singapore
In response to the rapid uptake of air conditioning in Qatar and across the Gulf, this project seeks to promote more culturally and environmentally sustainable forms of urban development through the revival of a ‘cool living heritage’. For most countries around half of all carbon emissions come from buildings, and in Qatar and throughout the Gulf a significant proportion of that energy consumption is associated with electronic cooling.
Addressing such issues, this project’s interdisciplinary methodology will first integrate a diverse array of material culture designs - spanning architecture, furniture, clothing, fanning and gardens - with examples of everyday customs, habits and social practices from Arab culture. From there the project will aim to critically appraise the possibilities and limitations of inserting this low-carbon ‘cool living heritage’ as an alternative to the energy intensive, climate control paradigm of electronic airconditioning. Particular focus will be given to such issues in the context of those mega-projects in Qatar, most notably Msheireb Downtown Doha, which identify cultural heritage as a key mechanism for achieving the twin goals of cultural sustainability and a more environmentally responsive form of urban development. The project brings together researchers from Australia, Singapore, and the UK, to work in collaboration with UCL Qatar.
Funded by Qatar National Research Foundation (USD 722,000.)
This paper develops the concept of thermal modernity in order to offer a more detailed understanding of air conditioning and the historical role it has played in transforming urban and built space. An analysis oriented by the insights of Science and Technology Studies stresses how the international ascendancy of air conditioning has been contingent upon certain socio-political forces and cultural changes that occur at the local level. The productive example of Singapore—often referred to as the ‘air-conditioned’ nation—is given to reveal the entanglements between indoor comfort provision, economic development and post-colonial nation-building. At a broader level, the paper points towards the importance of understanding air conditioning’s impact on the spread of international modernism in analytically expansive ways, such that we can more fully appreciate how it has acted to remodel the built environment at different scales and reconfigure indoor and outdoor relationships.
^ Source: SIAJ: Journal of Singapore Institute of Architects 51, 1972
Published in The Journal of Architecture 20, no.1 (2015): 92-121.
Urban green spaces are an important component of the urban ecosystem of cities as they provide a range of ecosystem services that contribute to sustainability and livability of urban areas. The extent to which such services are provided is influenced by limitations on biological processes that underpin such ecosystem services. A poorly understood limitation in the urban environment is the effects of shade created by buildings on the adequacy of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) for plant growth. We examined the effects of building shade in high-density, high-rise residential estates in Singapore on the level and distribution of PAR, and how PAR might in turn be correlated with growth of plants in community green spaces nested within these estates. Our estimates showed that high-rise and high- density buildings reduced daily PAR by almost 50% when compared to fully exposed conditions. The reduced PAR levels were
correlated with lower vegetative and reproductive growth of several species of shrubs, and increased slenderness of two tree species. The shade environment created by buildings was differentiated from shade under vegetation canopies by longer periods of high instantaneous PAR during a diurnal cycle. There was also evidence of higher red to far-red ratio in the spectral composition of PAR. We suggest that an understanding of the spatial and temporal characteristics of PAR is necessary for appropriate selection of plants, particularly to match daily PAR received on site to daily light integral requirements of plants for improved delivery of ecosystem services
Published in Urban Forestry & Urban Greening, 13, no. 4 (2014): 771-784.
Urban green spaces are an important component of the urban ecosystem of cities as they provide a range of ecosystem services that contribute to sustainability and livability of urban areas. The extent to which such services are provided is influenced by limitations on biological processes that underpin such ecosystem services. A poorly understood limitation in the urban environment is the effects of shade created by buildings on the adequacy of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) for plant growth. We examined the effects of building shade in high-density, high-rise residential estates in Singapore on the level and distribution of PAR, and how PAR might in turn be correlated with growth of plants in community green spaces nested within these estates. Our estimates showed that high-rise and high- density buildings reduced daily PAR by almost 50% when compared to fully exposed conditions. The reduced PAR levels were
correlated with lower vegetative and reproductive growth of several species of shrubs, and increased slenderness of two tree species. The shade environment created by buildings was differentiated from shade under vegetation canopies by longer periods of high instantaneous PAR during a diurnal cycle. There was also evidence of higher red to far-red ratio in the spectral composition of PAR. We suggest that an understanding of the spatial and temporal characteristics of PAR is necessary for appropriate selection of plants, particularly to match daily PAR received on site to daily light integral requirements of plants for improved delivery of ecosystem services on tropical architecture.
Published in Theoretical and Applied Climatology (2015):1-11.
Increasing food and energy self-sufficiency in residential areas is one of the key measures to reduce greenhouse gases emissions as well as to mitigate and adapt to climate change. The objective of the study is to verify the impact of building typologies and urban forms with relative high density on sunlight availability. Computational tools are employed to obtain quantifiable indicators of the potential of each variant for energy and food harvesting. Twenty five point block cases were assessed in terms of solar access by using three density and geometry parameters: plot ratio, site coverage and building height.
UrbanizationprocessinAsiaisincreasingatanunprecedentedrate.Newtowns are built in the cities’ outskirts occupying farmlands and therefore making urban population more dependent on food produced farer away or from overseas. Therefore, the integration of farming areas as part of the urban tissue should be consideredasoneofthedesignparametersfornewresidentialdistrictsinAsian cities. The paper deals with sunlight availability in relation to urban form, density and latitude. The objective of the study is to quantify the sunlight availability in 27 caseswithaseriesofdensitiesandurbanmorphologieslocatedatthreedifferent latitudes in Asia: Singapore (1.3°N), Hanoi (21°N) and Beijing (39.9°N).
USA
Assistant Professor Abel Tablada was invited by the Director or Master’s Degree in Environmental Design and Building Management Asst Prof Ana María Sánchez-ostiz Gutiérrez from the School of Architecture, University of Navarra to deliver a series of lectures, including a public lecture and to conduct a workshop related to the topic of Low-Carbon Architecture in the Tropics in the weekof16-20May,2015.Theworkshopwasattendedbylocalmasterstudents and by visiting students and a senior lecturer from Cardiff University. In total, 24 students – not familiar with tropical architectural and urban design – developed three schematic proposals for three sites and latitudes:
1. Nusajaya (Malaysia) 1.5° N / 103° E
2. Phnom Penh (Cambodia) 11.5° N / 104° E
3. Mariel (Cuba) 23° N / 82° W
Theworkshopobjectivewastoexploreanddesignpreliminarycityblockmassing for a new town near industrial areas for low-middle income residents to promote daylight, natural ventilation and self-sufficiency in terms of energy and food. The design process was supported by solar analysis and wind simulations.
NUSDepartmentofArchitecturejoinedtheSchoolofArchitectureofUniversity of Florida to participate in the Solar Decathlon 2015. Six students from NUS, accompanied and supervised by Dr Abel Tablada, participated in a workshop during June-July 2014 at U-Florida. The workshop was led by Assistant ProfessorBradleyWaltersfromU-Florida.DuringtheirstaytheNUSandlocal studentsattendedaseriesoflecturesandcontributedtothedesigndevelopment of the solar house.
Solar Decathlon 2015 NUS Department of Architecture joined the School of Architecture of University of Florida to participate in the Solar Decathlon 2015. Six students from NUS, accompanied and supervised by Dr Abel Tablada, participated in a workshop during June-July 2014 at U-Florida. The workshop was led by Assistant Professor Bradley Walters from U-Florida. During their staytheNUSandlocalstudentsattendedaseriesoflecturesandcontributedto the design development of the solar house.
Astheequatorialcity’srelationshiptoclimatebecomesanincreasingimperative; the program will research the atmospheric mediums of hot & wet architectures sited in five dense cities on the equator. Three features guide the work: saturated urbanisms, deep envelopes, and thick roofs. The focus is directed at modes of atmospheric calibration at the urban scale verlooked by traditional representation in drawing and photography. Humidity, temperature, breeze, sound, smell, rain and their impact on the city and architecture alike; from urban tobuilding,landscapetomaterial,habitationtointeriorwillexpandourrepertoire beyond the optic and iconic to the climatic and atmospheric.
Wheelwright Prize Presentation and WinnerSingapore’spublichousingprogramme-aninclusivespacethatprioritizesfamiliesandintergenerationalliving-isarguablythemostsuccessfulintheworld.Amidst thisbackdrop,03-FLATSfollowsthedometicexperiencesofthreesinglewomenwhoareatdifferentstagesoftheirlives.Lookingfromwithineachflat,thefilmmoves between the women’s distinctively lived interiors and the ordered public spaces beyond. It records how domestic resilience might resist the ennui of mass housing, turning housing into home. 03-FLATS is a key filmic output of a research initiative led by Dr Lilian Chee (Department of Architecture, NUS). Chee conceptualised the project and made the film in collaboration with award-winning Singaporean director and filmmaker Lei Yuan Bin (13 Little Pictures) to probe how domesticity - a critical component wherein home is produced - may be viscerally represented and experientially encountered. 03-FLATS was in competition at the Busan International Film Festival (2014) and won the best ASEAN documentary at the Salaya International Documentary Film Festival (2015).
From Classical Architecture, to Baroque, Renaissance, and later Modern Architecture,thereisanaccumulationofknowledgerecordedinwrittenaccounts, drawings as well as buildings and ruins that still stand proud up to this day. Much of these form what we know as the history of architecture—though perhaps one which revolves around the temperate region—with its established manners of representation and methods of understanding architecture.
On the other hand, close scrutiny on tropical architecture—at least in the SoutheastAsianregions—comesmuchlaterthanthatoftemperatearchitecture, probably sometime after the onset of colonisations just before the arrival of ModernArchitecturethatwouldintimeoverrodemuchoftheexistingvernacular traditions. Those constructed using traditional materials quickly perish and it does not help that in many communities building knowledge are passed verbally, rather than in drawings or writings. In contrast to drawings as a tool of designing prior to the construction of an architectural project, drawings of the vernacular architecture are often done as attempts at representing and recording by third parties, rather than by the designers or the builders.
Thispaperselectsthecriticalfewofthevernacularbuildingsthatareparticularly helpful in explaining the tropical enclosure with the prospect that the findings could be of help in understanding other strains of vernacular architecture found in the region. Eventually, by putting into question the unchallenged mode of presenting and understanding architecture predicated on the temperate conditions, it is hoped that some robustness could be injected into the presently languid discourse on tropical architecture.
Building codes worldwide refer to thermal comfort standards for the design of indoor climate. This has led to a normalization of indoor environments, characterized by air-conditioned thermal monotony and aimed at minimizing thermal sensations. This dissertation posits that indoor climate can drive new architectural experiences and should be explored as an expressive component of architecture. This dissertation argues that the current approach to climate regulation does not explore the potential for indoor climate to be experiential. By charting the emergence of a new type of air-conditioned space that departs from the usual comfort standard, I show that climate production can be a way to celebrate thermal experience in architecture. I postulate a shift from climate regulation to climate production due to rise of the experience economy, using Singapore as an example of how economic aspirations influence the way air-conditioning is used. Air-conditioning played a huge role in Singapore’s modernization, by eliminating thermal discomfort and increasing productivity, andnowitisbeingemployedtocreatedifferentiatedexperiencesforrecreational purposes. A sign that indoor climate production is not merely a thermal novelty, buthaswiderinfluenceonthewayweexperienceandconsumearchitectureand the urban environment.
01 Here Art Grows on Trees by Simryn Gill, 2013
02 Picturing the Tropics Within by Lilian Chee
03 The Handbook of Interior Architecture and Design by Graeme Brooker and Lois Weinthal, 2013
04 The Private Interior: Constructing The Modern Domestic Interior in Singapore’s Public Housing by Lilian Chee
05 06 Asian Cinema and the Use of Space by Lilian Chee and Edna Lim, 2015
07 08 Naturban by Adolf Sotoca and Oscar Carracedo, 2015
09 10 Vertical Garden City Singapore by Tan Puay Yok, 2014 11 12 BASECO 2014 Urban Revitalization Strategies for Low-Income Communities in Manila by Hwang Yun Hye and Oscar Carracedo Garcia-Villalba
13 Imperial Contagions edited by Robert Peckham and David M. Pomfret, 2013
14 ‘Tropicalizing’ Planning: Sanitation, Housing, and Technologies of Improvement in Colonial Singapore, 1907-42 by Chang Jiat Hwee
15 RIBA The Journal of Architecture volumn 21 no 1, 2015
16 Thermal Modernity and Architecture by Jiat-Hwee Chang, Tim Winter
17 Southest Asia in Question; Questions in Southeast Asia’s -- Architecture 1st SEAARC Symposium , 2015
18 Architecture, Society and Power, Chair: Chiang Jiat Hwee
19 New Urban Configurations edited by Cavallo, R., Komossa, S., Marzot, N. , Berghauser Pont, M., Kuijper, J. 2014
20 Integrating Design, Use and Operational Complexities in High-Density Urban Space Environments: ‘Tool for Urban Space Analysis (TUSA)’ by Im Sik Cho and Zdravko Trivic 2122 Ti Lian Seng, a+u Issue 528, Chief Editor Tomohisa Miyauchi, 2014
23 24 Innovating the “Hub-Ecosystem” for Healthy Strategic Growth: Singapore Sports Hub, a+u AsianEdition, Chief Editor Tomohisa Miyauchi, 2015
25 26 Past Wisdom in Future Design by Tomohisa Miyauchi, 2015
27 28 1000 Singapore: 8 Points of The Compact City Curated & Designed by: Khoo Peng Beng, Erik L’Heureux and Florian Schätz
29 Detail in Contemporary Residential Architecture 2 by David Phillips and Megumi Yamashita, 2014
30 Details of Stereoscopic House by Erik L’Heureux
31 32 Deep Veils by Erik L’Heureux, 2014
33 34 Dirty Little Secret Thesis Studio Research
35 36 Hot, Wet & Breezy Studio
37 Hot & Wet Studio
38 39 40 41 42 43 44 Climate + Territory Section Posters