Gardens in the sky
>A vertical park in the city - is WOHA’s stunning new hotel in Singapore. Singapore-based WOHA Architects have long been advocates of the ultimate ‘green city’ - one that would be comprised of more vegetation than if it were left as wilderness - and the PARKROYAL on Pickering in Singapore was designed as a hotelas- garden that would double the green-growing potential of its site.
Adorned by frangipani and palm trees and draped with tropical plants, curvaceous sky-gardens are cantilevered at every fourth level between the blocks of guest rooms.
A 12-storey tower above a 5-storey podium is placed on an E plan,so that all guest rooms look north to the park and/or into the sky gardens, whilst the services and the external connecting corridors were placed on the southern elevation. As the hotel is ‘self-shaded’ by the projecting sky gardens and the adjacency of the three room-blocks and shielded from early morning and afternoon sun by adjoining buildings, the rooms could be fully glazed (by low-emissivity glass) without external screening devices.
The podium represents a monumental embellishment to the Singapore streetscape, and has thus immediately achieved something that no other recent building has even attempted in the city.
Referred to by WOHA as ‘topographical architecture’, stratified layers of pre-cast concrete weave through a modular grid of cylindrical columns without interruption and without acknowledgment of the boundaries between exterior and interior. Cascades flow down from swimming pools and garden terraces on the podium roof, over the eroded rock-forms of the striated mass, and into crevices and ledges from which trees and vines can thrive.
The PARKROYAL on Pickering occupies a long and narrow site on the western edge of the central business district, and as the building would be extremely visible, the architects could make a grand (and green) urban gesture. Greenery flourishes throughout the entire complex, and the trees and gardens of the hotel appears to merge with those of the adjoining park as one continuous sweep of urban parkland.
WOHA