|
Singapore, Aug 2008 - WOHA Press release:
Newton Suites, Singapore
This 36-storey development is a study in environmental solutions to tropical
high-rise living. The design integrates several sustainable devices into
a contemporary architectural composition, creating a sustainable, contemporary
addition to the city skyline.

Photos: Albert Lim
The building sits at the edge of a high-rise zone and fronts a height-controlled
area that affords expansive views of the central nature reserves; a rare
luxury in densely built Singapore.

Photo: Tim Griffith
The exterior of the tower uses sunshading elements, patterned planes of
textured panels and protruding balconies to create a facade that is functional
yet expressive. The horizontal, metal expanded mesh sunshading screens
the strong tropical sunlight. The angled mesh prevents insolation while
permitting visual connection to the ground. The angled expanded mesh changes
appearance with viewpoint, appearing anywhere between solid and transparent.
This, combined with the cast shadows and interference patterns between
the shadows and the mesh, gives the building a constantly shifting, blurred
appearance depending on angle and time of day. The layers of sunshading
screens also changes the reading of the projections of the bay windows,
a standard applied feature of Singapore apartments due to their contribution
to developer profit and prescriptive regulations, embedding them in the
language of the building.

Photo: Tim Griffith
Landscape is used as a material rooftop planting, skygardens and
green walls were incorporated into the design from the very beginning.
Creeper screens are applied to otherwise blank walls to create visual
delight, absorb sunlight and carbon and create oxygen in the dense environment.
Most available horizontal and vertical surfaces are landscaped; creating
an area of landscaping that is 130% (110% planted) of the total site.
Trees cover the carpark, project from the skygardens at every 4
levels and crown the building at the penthouse roof decks. The above ground
carpark uses far less energy than an underground carpark and is fully
enclosed with creepers, absorbing exhaust emissions. The carpark roof
houses a substantial clubhouse with gym, steam room, party areas and 25m
swimming pool with a glass overflow edge.

Photo: Tim Griffith
The end-user experiences panoramic views foregrounded by sky gardens and
greenery, bringing the indoor-outdoor potential of living in the tropics
into the sky, and bring this to a sector of the community who cannot afford
landed housing. Common skygardens create delight at every lift lobby,
turning the wait for the lift in the rush to work into a brief contact
with fresh air, trees and sky. The two penthouses include swimming
pools with double volume mesh pergolas.

Photo: Tim Griffith
The environmental elements added to liveable apartments and extensive
communal areas combine to make a unique tropical building that achieves
both Singapore's national vision for a green city and an improved living
environment for the inhabitants.
Project Title
Newton Suites, Singapore
Project Location
60 Newton Road Singapore 307994

Photo: Tim Griffith
Project Dates Design Inception: 01 Dec 2003
Start of Construction: 15 Oct 2004
Completed: 30 Jun 2007
Project Cost
$ 23.5m
Project Size Gross Floor Area: 11,834.93sqm
Plot Area: 3,842.51sqm

Photo: Tim Griffith
Architects
WOHA Architects Pte Ltd
Project Team:
Alen Low, Andrew MacLennan, Ang Chow Hwee, Chan Ee Mun, Eow Wan Lin
Goh Soon Kim, Janita Han, Johan Hermijanto, Melinda Song, Pham Sing Yeong
Richard Hassell, Sabrina Foong, Tang Chia Ling, Wong Mun Summ
Newton Suites
Architect : WOHA
1 Moulmein Rise
: Residential Tower
Singapore Tower Building
: OMA
World Architecture : e-architect
- a guide to key buildings across the globe
Singapore Waterfront
Singapore Buildings
Comments / photos for the Singapore Residential Tower page welcome:
info@e-architect.co.uk
Newton Suites Singapore Building
- page: adrian welch / isabelle lomholt
|