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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

ENVELOPE HOUSE in Singapore by ASOLIDPLAN

 
January 19th, 2022 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: ASOLIDPLAN

The brief was for a multi-generational home for three households – the client’s young family with a child, their parents, and their aunt – with private spaces, common spaces and generous greenery.

We formulated the parti as a landscape double skin enveloping three levels of habitable spaces and punctured by a vertical landscaped courtyard.

The first level is for communal use, second for the elderly parents and aunt, and the third level for the young family with their own private door and staircase. A roof garden caps the building.

Image Courtesy © KHOO Guo Jie

  • Architects: ASOLIDPLAN
  • Project: ENVELOPE HOUSE
  • Location: Singapore
  • Photography: KHOO Guo Jie
  • Gross Built Area (m2/ ft2): 620m2
  • Completion Year: 2020

Image Courtesy © KHOO Guo Jie

While giving everyone their private spaces, we used a central garden courtyard to connect all three levels. The staircase to the second level and a skybridge at the third level crisscross this courtyard, allowing for chance encounters within the family.

A water feature and tall indoor trees fill this courtyard, connecting the heart of the house to the outside.

Going against developmental pressure, we convinced the client not to maximise the built floor area but to focus on the quality of the space instead. The result is an unconventionally generous and grand indoor garden spanning three levels, and the intimate presence of greenery throughout the house.

Image Courtesy © KHOO Guo Jie

Image Courtesy © KHOO Guo Jie

The landscaped double skin, indoor water garden, triple-volume courtyard with ventilated skylight, and roof garden work together to create comfortable microclimatic conditions; the house is constantly breezy and cool despite its west-facing orientation. We managed to create a climate-appropriate tropical house without the usual tropical architectural solutions of deep eaves and overhangs, which are increasingly difficult to achieve in land-scarce Singapore.

The landscaped double skin strategy and its effective biophilic and microclimatic effects show that there are still new ways to create tropical architecture in a dense urban environment like Singapore.

The triple-volume indoor water garden – with a staircase weaving through foliage and a skybridge crossing the tree canopy – brings nature indoors and into the residents’ everyday life.

Image Courtesy © KHOO Guo Jie

Image Courtesy © KHOO Guo Jie

Image Courtesy © KHOO Guo Jie

Image Courtesy © KHOO Guo Jie

Image Courtesy © KHOO Guo Jie

Image Courtesy © KHOO Guo Jie

Image Courtesy © KHOO Guo Jie

Image Courtesy © KHOO Guo Jie

Image Courtesy © KHOO Guo Jie

Image Courtesy © KHOO Guo Jie

Image Courtesy © KHOO Guo Jie

Image Courtesy © KHOO Guo Jie

Image Courtesy © KHOO Guo Jie

Image Courtesy © ASOLIDPLAN

Image Courtesy © ASOLIDPLAN

Image Courtesy © ASOLIDPLAN

Image Courtesy © ASOLIDPLAN

Image Courtesy © ASOLIDPLAN

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Categories: House, Residential




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