• Title/Summary/Keyword: 싱가포르 개선신탁

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A Study on Diversification of Open Space and Formation of Neighborhood at the Singapore Public Housing in 1950s (1950년대 싱가포르 공공주택에서 오픈 스페이스의 다양화와 근린의 형성에 관한 연구)

  • Woo, Don-Son;Tak, Chung Seok
    • Journal of architectural history
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    • v.24 no.4
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    • pp.19-28
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    • 2015
  • This study examines the Singapore public housing supplied by Singapore Improvement Trust (SIT) in the 1950s. Focused on the Princess Elizabeth estate and Princess estate of Queenstown, this study surveys their construction backgrounds, site plans, unit plans, architectural designs and meanings. The Princess Elizabeth estate was the model estate for workmen's flats. This estate showed mixed blocks of flats arranged around a large quadrangled open space for children. The Princess estate was a neighborhood of Queenstown, Singapore's the first new town. At this Estate, there were some new architectural occurrences departing from the Tiong Bahru Estate. Those are the appearance of high-rise typology, and the increased specificity in the functions of open spaces. Thus the open space became to get hierarchy, and divided an estate to small neighborhood units. For the SIT, open space is synonymous with the improvement of urban environment. Through the purposeful creation of open space, the SIT intended to solve the problem of sanitation and to make a neighborhood unit which can be pleasant place for regional community.

A Study on Assimilation and Transplantation of Public Housing at the Tiong Bahru Estate in Singapore from the 1930s to the 1950s (1930년대에서 1950년대까지 싱가포르 티옹 바루 단지에서 공공주택의 동화와 이식에 관한 연구)

  • Woo, Don-Son;Tak, Chung Seok
    • Journal of architectural history
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    • v.23 no.6
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    • pp.27-37
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    • 2014
  • Early 20th century Singapore was faced with the problem of overcrowding. The attendant problems of a rapid increase in population density, namely the lack of proper housing and sanitation, resulted in the issue of an appropriate residential environment emerging as an important task in urban planning. It was necessary to construct housing estates in order to solve this issue. At that time, the British colonial government attempted to transplant modern technology into the construction process of a residential complex system. However, Singapore's climate and traditional lifestyle made it impossible to apply the British modern system in a straightforward manner, and in the process, a number of transformations emerged. With a specific focus on the Tiong Bahru estate, one of Singapore's representative public housing projects, from the 1930s through the 1950s, this study intends to look at the way in which such residential estates were assimilated into local surroundings, and the effect of the transplantation of British concepts of modern housing theory. Therefore, the study is divided into an examination of the estate both before and after the turning point of World War II. This study confirms that the difference between the pre-war and post-war planning strategies for the Tiong Bahru estate were made according to the concept of 'open space.'