People's Park Complex
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
People's Park Complex | |
Information | |
---|---|
Location | Chinatown, Outram, Singapore |
Status | Opened |
Use | Commercial and Residential |
Floor count | 31 |
Companies | |
Owner | People's Park Development |
Management | People's Park Development |
People's Park Complex (simplified Chinese: 珍珠坊; pinyin: Zhēnzhū fāng) is a high-rise commercial and residential building on Eu Tong Sen Street in Outram, within the Chinatown of Singapore.
Contents |
[edit] History
The People's Park Complex was a commercial cum housing project undertaken by the newly formed Urban Renewal Department of the Housing and Development Board's Sale of Sites programme. The project was the subject of the programme's first sale in 1967.
Located at the foot of Pearl's Hill, the site where the People's Park Complex currently stands was an open public park. It later became the People's Market or Pearl's Market with outdoor stalls which was destroyed by a fire in 1966.[1]
With a height of 103 metres (338 feet), the 31-storey People's Park Complex building was the first shopping centre of its kind in Southeast Asia and set the pattern for later retail developments in Singapore. The shopping centre was completed in October 1970, while the residential block, in 1973. Occupying 1.0 hectare in the heart of Chinatown, the People's Park Complex was the largest shopping complex in the shopping cum commercial belt along Eu Tong Sen Street and New Bridge Road.
[edit] Architecture
In 1967, following the break-up of Malayan Architects Co-Partnership, William Lim set up Design Partnership (now known as DP Architects) with Tay Kheng Soon and Koh Seow Chuan. In its first year, the firm was successful with its architectural proposal for People's Park Complex.[2]
The People's Park Complex is a large mixed-use development, consisting of offices and apartments above a podium of shopping space. The complex was envisioned as "a new nucleus within the whole fabric of the city core", and was designed to revitalise one of the most populated and traditional enclaves in post-independent Singapore. Being a "people's shopping centre", the complex is strategically located in one of the most populous areas in Singapore's central business district.
The architecture of the complex scored several firsts in Singapore. Its name as well as the block of flats was the closest to Le Corbusier's ideal of high-rise living, as expressed in his Marseilles Unité d'Habitation, both in concept and in form.[3]
The building's main tower accommodates a variety of apartment sizes, and access to them is independent of the shopping centre at the podium. Its 25 levels have been nicknamed "streets in the air", a development of the Corbusian ideal, and offer convenient spots for social interaction and intermingling. Design Partnership added verticals to the building's roof, enhancing the visual impact of the residential block.[3] The roof-level common area contains shared amenities, like a crèche and open-air play space, built for communal use.
The shopping centre incorporates the first "city room" or atrium in Singapore, a concept that was pioneered by several Japanese architects under the Metabolist Movement in the 1960s.[3] When Japanese architect Fumihiko Maki visited the site during construction, he exclaimed "But we theorised and you people are getting it built!".[2] The shops in the shopping mall surrounds the large internal "city room", which consists of two multi-storey interlocking atriums, where a large number of "turn-over shops" and kiosks are located. The "city room" serves to retain the busy character of Chinatown.
The original exterior finish of the People's Park Complex was exposed raw concrete, in keeping with the Brutalist architectural style. This was also manifested in the design of the tower and podium, and the circular potholes topping off the residential building. Today, the building's façade has been painted over with shades of green and maroon.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Singapore Infopedia: Pearl's Hill. National Library Board. Retrieved on 2007-08-10.
- ^ a b Robert Powell (2004), Singapore Architecture, Periplus Editions, ISBN 0-7946-0232-0
- ^ a b c Jane Beamish, Jane Ferguson (1989), A History of Singapore Architecture: The Making of a City, Graham Brash, ISBN 9971-947-97-8
[edit] References
- Wong Yunn Chii (2005), Singapore 1:1 City: A Gallery of Architecture & Urban Design, Urban Redevelopment Authority, ISBN 981-05-4467-7
- Norman Edwards, Peter Keys (1996), Singapore - A Guide to Buildings, Streets, Places, Times Books International, ISBN 9971-65-231-5