One George Street
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One George Street | |
---|---|
Location | Raffles Place, Downtown Core, Singapore |
Construction period | 2003 - 2004 |
Primary usage | Office |
Opening date | 2005 |
Structural height | 153 m; 502 ft |
Floor count | 23 |
Floor area | 51,713.5 m² |
Owner | One George Street Pte Ltd (CapitaLand and ERGO) |
Management | CapitaLand |
Developer | One George Street Pte Ltd (CapitaLand and ERGO) |
Architect | Skidmore, Owing & Merill LLP and DCA Architects |
Main contractor | Kajima Overseas Asia Pte Ltd |
Website | www.capitalandcommercial.com |
One George Street is a 23-storey Grade A office tower in Raffles Place, Singapore. The office tower sits on the site of the now demolished Pidemco Centre and faces Hong Lim Park. It is owned by CapitaLand Commercial and ERGO, a German insurance corporation. Built at a cost of S$191 million, construction started in 2003 and was officially completed in 2005. Its major tenants include ERGO itself, Fitness First, Lloyds of London and Wong Partnership.
[edit] Architecture
The building comprises of two vertical sections linked by a central service spine, with the high-end structure being divided into zones. The building is supposed to function like a self-contained vertical city with "plugged-in" zones that offer recreational and commercial amenities spread over several floors. The lobby is two stories high to allow the park's greenery to be seen from the building. On the first floor, the lobby is designed with three glass pods signifying three entrances of the lift cores. One for the carpark and low rise floors, one for the medium rise and one for the high rise office floors.
The upper floors houses facilities from offices to trading floors with some floors having private lift lobbies. Four sky gardens are located on the 5th, 12th, 15th and 22th floors of the building, in response to the Urban Redevelopment Authority's GFA incentives and also to show the concept of extended greenery. On the fifth floor, it houses restaurants, a gym, swimming pool, jogging track and a few offices. The sky garden occupies the majority of the floor.
The floor plates of the building are large and flexible as such in future it will be easier to accommodate changes to the building. One Geroge Street has a design of a homogeneous metalic box, due to its appearance from outside and the steel facade. Its building has a glass curtain wall and its facade provides exposure necessitates a second layer of sunshading louvres. There is a space apart between the louvres are adjusted to fit the function of its spaces, such as concealing the car park floors from the main road, and wider to allow views from office floors.
[edit] References
- Wong Yun Chii (2005), Singapore 1:1 - City, Urban Redevelopment Authority, ISBN 9810544677