A Working Archive of Design, Research and Thoughts
A Working Archive of Design, Research and Thoughts
The project is an investigation into notions of ‘tropicality’ in the context of Singapore. Historically, concepts of nature, comfort, civil behaviour and progress have been shaped by depoliticised agendas grouped under the umbrella of ‘tropicality’. Framing ‘tropicality’ in terms of scarcity and affordances, the project ‘unmakes’ colonial vestiges of ‘tropical success’ that linger in our infrastructure and ‘remakes’ a landscape of affordances.
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Scale of the Island-scape
The first scale of the project investigates tropicality at a transnational and islandwide scale. Sites of production, reproduction and exchange are connected in a networked landscape across Singapore, unearthing the flows of material, people and meaning that make up the current landscape.
A Post-Tropical Network of Urban Instruments
The issue of ‘tropicality’ is framed in terms of man-made scarcity and potential affordances. Eight key resource of land, water, food, energy, labour, material, biodiversity and civic space are investigated as tropical ‘technicalities’. This forms the basis of a language of interventions that both physically provides new affordances within the familiar urban landscape.
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Scale of Infrastructural Urbanism
While the network of urban tools ‘unmade’ infrastructures of scarcity and ‘remade’ affordances, the proposal then attempts to synthesise the two strands of thought to forge an architecture from this post-tropical condition, at the scale of infrastructural provision.
A New Socio-Ecological Continuum
The proposal is a radical re-imagining of land use, proposing an inhabitable eco-corridor that completes the ecological connectivity between Tengah forest and the nature reserve, while also providing the housing units that was to be built by clearing Tengah. Along this new linear ecourban continuum, civic nodes bring neighboring communities together, weaving together an interconnected post-tropical network.
A Taxonomy of Post-Tropical Architectures
The eco-corridor is made up of eight new architectural prototypes that share the material and reproduction logic but serve different programmes. Apart from new housing typologies, there are hydropower pools, bamboo and timber community workshops, artificial paddy fields and shade-giving hydroponic growing towers.
Metabolic Systems
The infrastructure aims to produce and reproduce itself, both socially and materially. Thus, brick, bamboo and timber are chosen for the ability to be made and used locally in-situ. Growing periods, cultivation cycles and mechanical properties of these materials have informed the largescale masterplanning of infrastructure as well as the small-scale details of material logic and aesthetic.
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Scale of the Domestic Everyday
Lastly, the project turns to an intimate domestic scale. At this scale, I turned to oral histories, generational memory and intimate familial moments of the domestic to re-imagine how we might live in the future, in tandem to the infrastructure of affordances proposed.