Post on 05-Apr-2018
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MICA(P)056/09/2008PP14616/05/2010(024535)
The next generation ofarchitecture in Asia+New building technologiesand products
Featuring futureprojects inAu st ra li aChinaHong KongIndiaIndonesiaKoreaMalaysiaMiddle EastPhilippinesSingapore
ThailandVi et na m
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Australia
Eastwood Shopping Centre Mixed Use Development 14
China
C&D Internati onal Tower 18
Proposed Institute of Culture in Beijiao, Fo Shan 20
Chengdu IFC 24
Oak Bay Retail Complex 26Cha Guang Office Complex 28
Rundi Office 30
Shenyang New World Convention & Exhibition Centre 32
Masterplanning @ Zhaoqing City 34
Hong Kong
Redevelopment of Hong Kong Sports Institute 38
Redevelopment of Victoria Park Swimming Pool 40
Kwun Tong Town Centre Redevelopment 42
The Hong Ko ng Polyt echnic Univers ity Phas e 8 Developmen t 44
High Technology Industrial and Office Building at
Tseung Kwan O Sci ence and Technology Park 46
J Hotel @ Jervois Street 48
India
Atmantan Heal th Resor t 52
Indonesia
Saffron Residence 58
Jababeka Movieland 62
Paddy Box Villa 64
Masjid Al-Irsyad Kota Baru Parahyangan 68
Archipelago Arena 72
Contents
Arengka Oa sis
Bengkulu Science Center
Habitat Sculptural Building
Hanging Villa
Andara Apar tment
Hotel Danar Hadi
MSC School
Korea
Songdo International Plaza
Malaysia
The Light Penang Water front Ci ty
Bird Island Green Homes Competition
KKIP - V24 Housing Development
Proposed Office & Hotel at Lot G, KL Sentral
Lot G Retail & Office Tower 1
DIGI Technology Operatio n Centre
SOHO @ Gurney Drive
New MITI (Ministry of International Trade and Industry) Headquarters
Bio Innovation Center
Naza Headquarter & Office Suites
Middle East
Al Mashtal
Proposed CBD Masterplan for Al-Reem Plot 4
Kamal Mixed Use Development
Multi-Purpose Administration Complex at Ras Laffan
The Twins, Tehran
Shaden Al Hail Mixed Use Development
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Diamond Island
Dai Phuoc Lotus
Bao Dai Royal Resort
Hon Tam Paradise Hotel
Da Lat Anh Sang Commercial and Residence Complex
Hanoi Academy Primary and Secondary School
Saigon Sun Tower
Song Kim Plaza
Sunrise City
Tan Binh Commercial Center
Thao Dien Apa rtment
The Vista Residential Development
TKV Tower
Binh Tay Plaza
FPT 89 Lang Ha Building
Technologies@10
Adhesives
Laticrete South East Asia Pte Ltd
Air dist ribution system
TROX Technik
Architectur al membrane
Taiyo Birdair As ia Pte L td
Bathroom appliances & accessor ies
Rigel Technology (S) Pte Ltd
Benchtops, laminates & joinery
TAK Products & Services Pte Ltd
Concrete supply & admixtures
Holcim (Singapore) Pte Ltd
Curtain walling
YKK AP Si ngapore P te Ltd
Philippines
Chang Kai Shek University 144
Hinulugang Taktak Water Falls Leisure and Commercial Resort 146
The Strat ford Resid ences 148
Widus Int ernational Leisure 150
Cala 152
68 Roces 154
Proposed 2-Storey Commercial Building 156
Global Gateway Logistics City 158
Centro Florete Commercial Center 160
Singapore
National Heart Centre Singapore 164
Solaris 166
Internatio nal Cruise Terminal 170
Centre for Aquatic Science Research (CASR) 172
The Concours e Skyline 174
Thailand
Thailand Cult ural Center 178
Gateway Ekamai 182
Falcon Hill Condominium 184
IDEO Blucove Sukhumvit 186
L-Building 188Le Palais 190
Ratchathewi Hotel 192
MCOT Land Development 194
Vietnam
Phu Thuan Complex 198
MB Land Tower 200
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Doors commercial & a utomation
Glutz Singapore Pte Ltd 240
Doors hardware
Carl F Singapore (Asia) Pte Ltd 241
Electronic light & shade sys tems
Lutron GL Ltd. 242
Fans
Capital Distributors (S) Pte Ltd 244
Fire curta in
Colt Ventilation East Asia Pte Ltd 245
Floorcover ing ti mber
Jason Parquet Specialist (S) Pte Ltd 246
Furniture home & int erior
Xtra Desig ns Pte L td 247
Gratings & tree-grates
Jonite Pte Ltd 248
Heating, v entilatio n & air-condit ioning
Belimo Actuators Ltd. 249
Kitchen app liances & a ccessories
Brandt Asia Pte Ltd 250
Integrat ed securit y solut ions
EVVA 252
Kitchen si nks
Reginox Far East Pte Ltd 253
Laundry a ppliances & accessori esCapital Marketing (S) Pte Ltd 254
Louvres & vents
ABDA Engineer ing Pte L td 255
Lifts & e scalators
Schindler Lifts (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. 256
Lighting fluorescent, lamp, LED & ot hers
Philips Lighting Singapore
Plasterbo ard & gy psum
Knauf Singapore Pte Ltd
Radiant/v apour bar rier
Eltraco Holdings Pte Ltd
Renewable ene rgy so lar panel & others
Mitsubishi Electric Asia Pte Ltd
Roof clad ding & sy stems solar & t hermal membra nes
Sika (Singapore) Pte Ltd
Sanitary ware
KOHLER Co.
Seating theatre & auditorium
Figueras Seating Asia
Smoke control system
Colt Ventilation East Asia Pte Ltd
Solar shading system
Colt Ventilation East Asia Pte Ltd
Wall covering
Seng Lee Interiors Pte Ltd
Waterproofing
BASF South East Asia Pte Ltd
Window film
Cool N Lite Solar Film Pte Ltd Wine chiller
Capital Marketing (S) Pte Ltd
indices
Companies in projects (in alphabetical order)
Companies in Technologies@10 (in alphabetic al order)
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road becomes a significant element within the overall plaza design. The bringing together of these public
and private urban activities will create a very dynamic and memorable place. Another key to the design is
the degree to which the six buildings relate to each other and to the future context of Songdo City. A spiral
progression sets the general massing of the composition with the shortest building on the southwest corner of
the site and the tallest on the southeast corner, moving clockwise around the site.
The buildings are conceptualised as a series of north/south plan layers much like the layers of mountains
and valleys in the Korean landscape. The designers have kept an ideal planning dimension from the core
to the perimeter glass wall and have allowed the ends of these layered slabs to curve and twist vertically.
Adjacent build ings create a fi gural space bet ween them and lock t hem together much l ike how dancers c reate
space on a dance floor.
At key moments with in the design the massing of the individua l buildings is broken down with reveals and
interlocking edges conceptualised as ancient wood joinery. These joints and reveals offer connections to
various urban scales that happen naturally throughout a city. The long faades of the buildings are alternating
panels of clear low iron, high-performance glass and glass layered with copper mesh. The edges of the
buildings consist of a high-performance reflective glass heightening the curvature of their forms. Waterharvesting, planted roofs and walls, efficient planning and use of materials, and solar energy collection
comprise some of the strategies that seek to make this a LEED-rated and sustainable design.
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Section Perspective view
Songdo International Plaza(Blocks F3/F5)
SongdoIncheon
Korea
Client
Gale International
Architecture Firm
Kohn Pedersen Fox
Associates P C
Principal Architect
William Pedersen
Design Architect
Trent Tesch
Mechanical & Electrical
Engineer
Cosentini Associates
Civil & Structural
Engineer
Arup
Landscape Designer
Mikyoungkim Design
Exterior ConsultantALT
This 3.2-million-square-foot mixed-use development is located on the western edge of Central Park, the main
open space of Songdo City. It consists of six individual tower buildings that sit on two adjacent north-south
running blocks separated by a 20-metre public road.
One key to the design is creating an internal public space that all six buildings share, a sort of city within a
city. The strategy is to integrate the 20-metre public road into the landscaped plaza like a stitch. Drop-off
areas and parking will be positioned at a sunken sky-lit level so that pedestrians may cross at grade. As the
road gently rises it crests two metres above the ground plane and the plaza dips gently underneath. The public
Site Area
619,000 square foot
Gross Floor Area
3,300,000 square foot
Building Height
(metres)
40170
Building Height
(storeys)
437
Superstructure
Construction Start
Date
2010
Scheduled Completion
Date
October 2012
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Site plan Perspective view
Perspective view
Perspective view Model Perspective view
Site plan
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164
National HeartCentre Singapore
Outram Campus
Singapore
Client
Ministry of Health, Singapore
Architecture Firms
Broadway Malyan in conjunction withOng & Ong Pte Ltd
Directors-in-charge
Jason Pomeroy & Ian Simpson
(Broadway Malyan);
Thomas Ho (Ong & Ong Pte Ltd)
Senior Project Manager
Matthew Saunders (Broadway Malyan)
Mechanical & Electrical
Engineers
Squire Mech Pte Ltd
Civil & Structural Engineers
Beca Carter Hollings & Ferner
(S.E Asia) Pte Ltd Perspective view
Project description
The National Heart Centre (NHC) is a competition-winning entry for the first sustainable heart centre in South
East Asia. Recognising the correlation between the healing properties of natural light and planting, the concept
draws inspiration from the medicinal courtyard gardens traditionally found in monasteries, from where the term
hospital (from the Latin hospes) originate s. A ground floor op en plaza tha t permits soci al interactio n and an
ease of movement is supported by a further series of semi-public open sky gardens that create naturally lit and
ventilated spaces where doctors, patients, workers and visitors alike can rest and recuperate. In their social
context these sky gardens assist in healing society back to good health, while in their physical context they
assist in healing the built environments carbon sores.
Design philosophy
Unlike the residential maxim that habitation is summarised by the three immortal words Location, Location,
Location, the design for the NHC is summarised by three very different words that, when put together, highlight
its importance as a health-caring facility: Placing People First. Yet individually, these words can also sum up
the architects design ethos for the centre:
Theimportanceofenvironmentallyresponsiveplacesthatpeoplecanwork,play,recuperatein;
Anunderstandingthatpeopleandthewaytheysociallyinteractiswhatturnsspaceintoplace;
SupportingSingaporesconvictionofcreatingthefirstsustainableHeartCentre,notonlyinSingaporebutin
the region, that will be socially, economically, environmentally and technologically responsive to the point of
global recognition.
The designers recognise that the 21st century has brought about resurgence in the understanding that space is
more important than the object as a means of reducing carbon footprints and creating more socially responsible
environments. Open spaces, be they planted sky terraces, atria or open plazas, can sustain the health and
(social) well-being for not only the patient, doctor and visitor, but also the health and (carbon) well-being of our
built environment.
A collection of different he althcare re lated and so cial function s are arran ged, like a coll egiate, aroun dopen spaces. These open spaces, be they internal or external, metaphorically act as the green lungs of the
development,healingthesickbacktogoodhealththroughtheprovisionofnaturallight,ventilationandview;
and healing the built environment back to good health through the provision of planting that acts as a carbon
sponge, noxious pollutant filter and heat island reducer.
It is the openness, legibility, and character of these spaces in relation to the more functional collegiate blocks
that allows for a greater sense of urban connectivity and relationship with the existing urban fabric, as opposed
to object driven slab and block development that can often socially alienate and be physically detrimental to
our environment. Extensive research has demonstrated that pedestrian flow is greatly influenced by the shape
of open spacesa fact that the designers have capitalised on in order to encourage footfall through the public
spaces to create heightened opportunities for social interaction and to capture footfall for retail opportunities.
Such spaces also permit an ease of movement through the development, improving operational efficiency for
staff, mitigating the anxiety of visitors and patients imbued in non-legible and tortuous routes and paths.
Site Area
8.9 hectares
Gross Floor Area
35,000 square metres
Building Height (metres)
44.55
Building Height (storeys)
10
Superstructure Construction
Start Date
2010
Scheduled Completion Date
2013
Perspective view
Perspective view
Interior view
Interior view
Interior view
Jason Pomeroy & Ian Simpson
Thomas Ho
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Phu Thuan Complex may be one of the most iconic projects of dwp Vietnam, coming in as a runner-up to
architectural giants such as Norman Foster in the Cityscape Asia Awards 2008. At 630,000 square metres
and floors reaching heights of 45 storeys, this building means business. There are 3,100 apartment units and
two floors of mixed retail and public space on ground level, aiming to service this self-sustaining community
in District 7, Ho Chi Minh City. The developer, PD Group would like construction to start as early as September
2010.
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Phu Thuan Complex
Client
Phat Dat Real EstateDevelopment JSC
Architecture Firm
dwp (design worldwide
partnership)
Mechanical & Electrical
Engineer
PME PM Engineering
Co., Ltd.
Site Area
112,585 square metres
Floor Area
626,400 square metres
Superstructure
Construction Start Date
1Q 2010
Scheduled Completion
Date
2013
Ho Chi Minh City
Viet nam
Perspective view
Perspective view
Peter Bachtold
Hoang Gia The
Site plan
Peter Bachtold, the current Architectural Design Director of dwp joined the Phu Thuan project in its second
phase of design. After the initial concepts had been approved by PD Group, it was time to make the buildinga reality, and this is where Peters practical expertise came into play. The original building form was inspired
by a single continuous loop, which was to replace previous ideas of blocks upon blocks of buildings on a large
plot of land. These rows of buildings would be substituted with a monstrous single block that was softened
into the shape of an undulating loop, creating different views, sun angles and breeze flows throughout. The
final shape took the form of a wave or a M bius strip offering various styles of dwelling units and many
opportunities for different kinds of glazing and natural landscaping. The apartments are designed for middle
to upper-middle class individuals and families and range from 120 to 250 square metres each. The aim is
to largely support these units with two floors of retail and recreation activities on ground level complete with
shops, cinema, parking and several swimming pools throughout.
Peters approach to undertaking this project with his team has been through space economy. By engineering
standards, this project is a humongous undertaking and solving what are usually routine practices of
distribution of mechanical and electrical services became like a giant, complicated puzzle. He has ensured
that the architecture team continues to integrate natural light into the dwellings and public areas, and has
dramatically improved the efficiency of skinning the building with simple masonry walls to counteract the
ominous nature of the building. He is very proud of the achievements of his team considering the fact that
something like the Phu Thuan complex has never been built in Vietnam before.
Most interior functions have been approved by the client to this point, however, there are still negotiations
about the faade. With the huge budget of the building being a concern during current economic times there
has been a necessary reduction to the faade from over 75 kilometres to 45 kilometres. Whatever the final
skin will be, this giant will not go unnoticed once its completed. Standing in an open, fairly uninhabited part of
District 7, this building will truly be a test of living on a grand scale in Vietnam.