Singapore’s urban development has been fast paced over the past half century. After becoming an independent republic in 1965, the small island state with limited land and natural resources and a current population of approximately 5.6 million, embarked rapidly on industrialization and urbanization programs to provide jobs and housing for its people. Ever since, the
Singapore’s urban development has been fast paced over the past half century. After becoming an independent republic in 1965, the small island state with limited land and natural resources and a current population of approximately 5.6 million, embarked rapidly on industrialization and urbanization programs to provide jobs and housing for its people. Ever since, the built and the natural environment have been high on Singapore’s agenda and the vision for its built environment has evolved from a ‘Garden City’ to a ‘City in a Garden’. In this context, Singapore has been the place of a number of visionary projects that can be interpreted as ‘modernist utopian constructs’ for the building of the Nation.
Showcasing selected projects from 1970 to the present, Equatorial Utopia: 50 Years of Visionary Architecture in Singapore portrays how visionary architecture and urban design in Singapore, often with strong Western influences, have been tempered, adapted, and transformed by the socio-cultural, economic, climatic and political conditions of the location. The built projects selected for the exhibition demonstrate the utopian dimension of architecture in Singapore, and have had significant impact on the discourse on architecture and urban design in Southeast Asia and beyond.
About the curators:
The Maison de l’Architecture de Genève, established in 2007, is a nonprofit organization with the mission to foster exchange about and reflection on the art of building. Every year, MA organizes thematic conferences and exhibitions on topics related to territory, urbanism, engineering and architecture. These events are open to other disciplines as well, with the aim of raising awareness and sensitizing the public on the larger discourse on the built environment.
G8A is an architecture, urban planning and interior design company with offices in Geneva, Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City and Singapore. From design principles established in Switzerland, then learning from the contrasting context of the East, the company has been able to strengthen its designs with projects in Asia for over a decade.
The Singapore-ETH Centre Future Cities Laboratory was established by ETH Zurich and the National Research Foundation Singapore in collaboration with key academic partners including the Singapore University of Technology and Design in 2010 to study sustainable future cities through science, by design and in place.
Equatorial Utopia is supported by a private foundation in Geneva. the Loterie Romande, ETH Zurich (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology), the Singapore Heritage Society, the Singapore University of Technology and Design, the Singapore Institute of Architects and the Pavillon Sicli.