Showing posts with label Singapore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Singapore. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 May 2011

Sticky Note 11: Beauty Emporium

Every girl loves the idea of a Beauty Emporium, right? Well, I just know that you are going to love this project by Singapore based design firm, Formwerkz. The brief was to design a space for the client, Spa Espirit Group, that became the worlds first one stop shop for beauty and nutritional needs. A place where you can pick up a massage, fascial, manicure, Brazillian wax or brow du jour, a book, a shooter and the latest album release from Nouvelle Vague.

Formwerkz have used the strategy 'Reduce - Recycle - Reuse' as they transformed the existing spa premise with minimal wastage and cost.








As you can see from these amazing images, it's not surprising that the Beauty Emporium received an honourable mention at the 10th 2010 Singapore Institute Architectural Awards.

Now a little bit about the philosophy behind Formwerkz:

We have no interest for architecture that is preoccupied with it's obsessive pursuit of minimal refinement as an end. 

Rather, we want our efforts to be directed towards the recovery of mutual human relationships, and the restoration of primordial relationships between man and nature.

We are keen to design happenings or more precisely, conditions that can espouse more active engagement from man with his environment.  


Please feel free to make comments as I would love to hear your thoughts!




Tuesday, 24 May 2011

Sticky Note 10: Wood Infused Apartment

Cultural habits, climatic conditions and a call for pragmatics come together in a wood-infused apartment.


I just love this Singapore apartment by the brilliant designers at Studio SKLIM. Thought and care has gone into the impeccable detailing of all of the timber veneer joinery and it is just devine! 

Thank you to Studio SKLIM for allowing me to blog about Red Hill Apartment. Please check out there website, they have completed amazing projects!




Public housing has come a long way in Singapore providing the needs for 80-90% of the population. The perception of public housing in the world is perhaps not of the best, but in Singapore, the quality and standards of these apartments well rest above the poverty line, driving prices rocket high.
The client had just returned from a three-year long diplomatic stint and was looking to refurbish his apartment to welcome his new addition to the family.
Pragmatics was the primary driving force of this project. The main challenge was to reconfigure a public housing apartment amidst the regulatory constraints into an object of spatial flow. The present main foyer/dining/living/kitchen space was segmented with proportions that were not user friendly. The foyer area and the kitchen entrance were too generous and encroached upon the dining room. The Asian lifestyle with regards to cooking, culture (eg. Feng Shui) and climate were duly considered as design challenges.



After a study of the existing structure, we removed one of the non-load bearing walls and reconfigured the rest of the surrounding spaces. The concept was simple: to create a large space with distributed furniture and a mirrored surface to reflect the surrounding spaces. The kitchen was subdivided into a wet and dry area with part of the latter extending to become a foyer cabinet. The dining space became larger and visual continuity was achieved with all the surrounding built-in furniture; from the foyer to the dry kitchen to the living room set. It became a set of separate furniture pieces for one big space!




The design approach to the individual furniture pieces were derived from their inherent functions and their relationship to each other in that particular space. For example, the slope of the entrance foyer piece was a reflection of the inclined shoe rack enclosed in the bottom cabinet. In hot and humid Singapore, residents prefer to keep the main doors open to encourage natural ventilation. The gap between the top and bottom pieces facilitated this cross ventilation and gave a sense of semi-privacy to the apartment.









The furniture pieces were designed as a set and related to the bigger spatial flow with geometry and material continuity. The large wooden grain textures that clothed the furniture took a further inspiration from the Miesian aesthetics of the Tugendhat House but redone for this modern context.
The Redhill Apartment was an attempt to provide an insertion of nuanced living infused with cultural habits, climatic conditions and a call for pragmatics in an otherwise generic housing estate.

'Like everything else in the house, it displays a sensitivity to the subtleties of everyday living'

Words : Studio SKLIM
Photography: Jeremy San

Amazing huh? I thought you would think so! Please feel free to leave comments, I always enjoying hearing from you.