Posted by: DesignFlute on: January 11, 2008
School of Art, Design & Media, Nanyang, Singapore
Designers : CPG Consultants Pte Ltd
This is a 5-storey School of Art, Design & Media at Nanyang Technological University campus, Singapore. This stunning piece of award-winning architecture is situated in a wooded valley. Before you read on, answer this : is this a landscape or a building?
The embracing arms of this unique building have a most spectacular verdant turfed roof which blends with ground contour as if emerges from it. It has glass curtain wall and raw concrete minus the painting.
Apart from its visual impact, the turfed roofscape helps to lower the roof temperature and surrounding areas. It works as a functional space, as a scenic outdoor community space via easily accessible sidesteps along the roof edge.
Lighting plays an important aspect to the building. The full glass curtain wall allows generous doses of daylight into the studios and galleries while cutting off the tropical heat. At night, the building glows like a lantern.
The exterior glass facade of the building allows full views to the outside, again providing visual connectivity with the surrounding lush landscape.
Three blocks of the school building are organically interwoven to enclose a sunken courtyard and a unique interconnectivity and flow.
The site is a wooded valley which was supposed to be left as a green lung in the master plan of the 200-hectare Nanyang Technological University campus. The designer-planners, however, carved a habitat from the constraints of the valley. And instead of imposing a building onto the landscape, they let the landscape play a critical role in moulding the building. It allows the original greenery of the site to creep and colonise the building.
The building design challenges the traditional linear system of education with a clear teacher-student arrangement. Here, given the sloping nature of the architectural form, many of the teaching spaces come in different shapes and volumes which could be easily adapted to different needs. For example corridors and cozy corners double up as informal exhibition areas. The architectural form beautifully complements and creates an ambience and environment conducive for exploration and exchange of ideas for the arts and design students.
Apart from glass wall the building is also cladded in natural forms, like the off-form concrete walls and columns, cement-sand screeded floors and timber railings. To reinforce the natural theme, loud colours and elaborate decoration are avoided. This also means students have been provided with the perfect platform to express themselves by adorning the surfaces of the building with their works thus allowing the building to evolve its own identity.
This is the kind of architecture where you learn new meanings of the term eco-sensitivity!
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Wow, this is amazing….
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[...] come we don’t get buildings like this one in Australia, Head over to designflute.wordpress.com/2008/01/11/green-turfed-roofscape/ and check out the 5 storey School of Art, Design & Media at Nanyang Technological University [...]
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[...] landscape. This is a job well done! Read more about the design and benefits of a grass roof at DesignFlute. No Comments, Comment or [...]
Absolutely breathtaking idea…not only is it practical, but it extremely engaging for viewers. I only wish I was standing directly in front of it so I could run up the green roof!
Really inspires me that change for a green future is on the horizon. It pushes me to believe in my vision:: to do my part. As a designer, I open my mind up to creative thinking of other artists, and let me say, this ingenious design is doing more than just stimulating ideas; it is altering perception of achievable design with the earth in mind.
I appreciate the time and work put into this design more than you could imagine….Great Work!
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I am a first year student studying architecture and I have to say with my untrained (uninfluenced) eye that I now believe in love at first sight…
Great work…gives us a lot of inspiration n hope while designing buildings…
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January 11, 2008 at 7:50 pm
Thanks for sharing these great ideas. I’m bookmarking this for future reference. Some of these I already do, so the point resonated most strongly with me. Keep feeding the creativity.
I am currently on holiday so, for this reason, I’ve nothing better to do than surf the web for art, lie around and update my blog. Well, more or less anyway.
Doug C