Eco-Friendly House in Singapore Makes Most of the Tropics September 24, 2010 The design maximizes its waterfront location. (Photo courtesy of Homevaganza.com) Most people in Singapore do what they can to escape the humidity, spending their time in air-conditioned shopping malls and high-rise condos.
But Stephen Fisher, a banker with JP Morgan and a native Australian, wanted to embrace the tropical climate. He had been in Singapore for a decade, and he missed the outdoor life in Sydney, where he was raised.
"I wanted to live in an open space, not a concrete monolith," he said.
So in 2005, when 40 plots of land became available on the resort island 20 minutes from the city center, he snapped one up, paying 3.5 million Singapore dollars ($2.6 million) for the 2,400-square-meter parcel of land.
"It was one of the only plots in the whole country with ocean frontage," said Fisher, 45. "Being from Australia, that was prime."
Finding the right architect — someone who knew how to maximize water views and a sense of unrestricted space, and minimize the need for air-conditioning — was the next challenge. He said he chose Guz Wilkinson of Guz Architects, a Singapore firm that specializes in eco-friendly tropical homes, because "we shared the goal of fitting the house to the environment, rather than the other way around."
Construction was completed for 2.4 million Singapore dollars in April 2009. Fisher, who married soon after moving in, now shares the home with his wife, Shijung Park, 32, and their 1-year-old son, Scion. There is also another child on the way.
The design is simple: Two glass-and-wood pavilions — one for living, one for sleeping — connected by a floating bamboo walkway, surrounding an ocean-facing infinity pool.
Undulating roofs are lined with solar panels that generate about a third of the energy the house consumes, and grass planted on top provides insulation to optimize natural cooling and a spot for the couple to practice yoga at dawn. Sliding glass panels allow views of water and sky from every room and can be opened for natural ventilation.
The floors are bamboo or limestone on the lower level and concrete painted in white epoxy upstairs, and decoration throughout the house is minimal.
"I didn't want to feel enclosed in dark colors," Fisher said.
"From my sofa, I see all the boats coming and going into the Straits of Singapore. With this moving canvas, why would I need to hang anything on the walls?"
In the rear pavilion, the sprawling 275-square-meter master suite on the second floor overlooks the pool. The two children's bedrooms downstairs also open onto it. But the most dramatic view is from an underground room, where a five-inch-thick acrylic wall offers an underwater panorama.
Initially, Fisher balked at the idea of a cellar, assuming it would be dark and confined.
But "the clear wall solves the problem," he said. "Even in the basement, I have a water view."
New York Times |