Learning from Our Tampines Hub: Co-Generative Hubs for Urbanism
Author(s): |
Chee Huang Seah
Shawn Eng Kiong Teo |
---|---|
Medium: | journal article |
Language(s): | English |
Published in: | Built Environment, 9 February 2020, n. 1, v. 46 |
Page(s): | 76-98 |
DOI: | 10.2148/benv.46.1.76 |
Abstract: |
Within the past three years, the Singapore government has completed three integrated community hubs around the island. In tandem with the state's decentralization plan of 1991, such large-scale communal architecture plays a significant role in rejuvenating the heartlands and fostering a sense of place as towns mature. These nodal developments leverage on its urban context and programmatic offerings in a bid to generate a sustainable hub ecology for the city. Integrating various national and community stakeholders within a single development might seem like a literal trope for a whole-of-government approach to co-locate, co-share and collaborate. Through Our Tampines Hub, we examine the complexities of Singapore's first integrated hub. While validating the post-occupancy performance of the development, we also re flect and analyse specific design strategies and processes that aid in the social production of this mega community space. Through the theoretical underpinnings of largescale communal architecture as social condensers, this paper seeks to investigate the role and productive potential of this emerging shared urban model of integrated communal architecture in Singapore. It examines not only economic value in the land and space optimization harnessed, but also the new designs produced in the governance framework, closed-loop environmental outcomes and social impetus. |
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data sheet - Reference-ID
10414433 - Published on:
26/02/2020 - Last updated on:
26/02/2020