Avenue South Residences will be an innovative and eco-conscious residential district in Singapore anchored by two, 56-story skyscrapers nestled among five historically preserved buildings. The towers will be composed of prefabricated units and built among a backdrop of five four-story heritage, Art Deco-style buildings on Silat Avenue. Before assemblage, 80% of each module for Avenue South Residences will be created off-site and stacked and joined together on-site.
The live-work-play concept will provide a new residential product while preserving the neighborhood’s green spaces by connecting residents with the surrounding environment through the creation of an oasis-like community space surrounded by a canopy of conserved trees.
The two towers will each feature sharp, modern lines with pockets of sky terraces. The sky terraces are meant to break down the scale of the towers and create a visual connection to nature. Accessible to residents, the terraces will offer multi-story green spaces at varying levels above the city. Additionally, wood-colored vertical screens create a textured fabric aesthetic while providing sun-shading. The project will also feature an urban public park that provides a gateway to the adjacent rail corridor network, ensuring an active edge and entrance to the project.
Parking garages will include full-height green walls that wrap around the carpark podium on all sides. The living green wall exposes the carpark levels from the adjacent conserved block. The building facade facing the Rail Corridor at Avenue South Residences will showcase an outdoor vertical play green wall with creeper plants that will serve as a casual screening from the carpark. The interactive gardens include a built-in observation deck, rock climbing walls, and ramps linking to a playground at ground level.
See Also: Spacesmith will design sustainable production facilities for Upriver Studios in New York
The two towers are oriented in the north-south direction to capitalize on optimal passive solar design and airflow. They are placed to minimize their green footprint while allowing for adequate setback distances to preserve a view corridor, allowing a direct visual connection from the neighboring HDB blocks and mitigating traffic noise.
The project is slated for completion in 2026.
Related Stories
Multifamily Housing | Jan 29, 2019
Here's what $41M will buy you in the OMA-designed Avery tower in SF
A glass-enclosed, full-floor, 8,482-sf penthouse will sit more than 600 feet above San Francisco's Transbay District.
Multifamily Housing | Jan 28, 2019
Luxury townhomes rise on the site of a former office park in Irvine, Calif.
KTGY Architecture + Planning designed the project.
Multifamily Housing | Jan 25, 2019
The country's most expensive home sells for $238 million
The unit comprises four stories at 220 Central Park South in Manhattan.
Multifamily Housing | Jan 22, 2019
Caoba is the first tower to open at Miami Worldcenter
Caoba was co-developed by CIM Group and Falcone Group.
Multifamily Housing | Jan 16, 2019
Micro-units: Good for the city? Good for citizens?
Thinking more holistically about housing typologies and zoning will improve our public realm.
Multifamily Housing | Jan 7, 2019
364-unit multifamily development planned near Lake Lewisville in Texas
BGO Architects is designing the project.
Multifamily Housing | Dec 18, 2018
Redesigning the intergenerational village: Innovative solutions for communities and homes of the future
Social sustainability has become a central concern in terms of its effect that spans generations.
Multifamily Housing | Dec 11, 2018
62-story luxury rental tower provides 40,000 sf of indoor and outdoor amenities in Manhattan
CetraRuddy designed the building.
Multifamily Housing | Dec 6, 2018
JCJ Architecture to design new housing facility for Barrier Free Living
The non-profit’s new facility will provide housing and support services for survivors of domestic violence with disabilities.