Ad Assignment: Submitted By: Aishwarya Subhash Batch - A Roll No: 03
Ad Assignment: Submitted By: Aishwarya Subhash Batch - A Roll No: 03
SUBMITTED BY
: AISHWARYA SUBHASH
BATCH –A ROLL NO: 03
JEWEL CHANGI AIRPORT
Architects: Safdie Architects
Area: 135700 m²
Year: 2019
• Principal Architect:Safd Architects
• Local Architect:RS Architects Planners &
Engineers Pte Ltd
• Facade Consultant:BuroHappold Engineer
ing
• Lighting Consultant:Lighting Planners
Associates
• Landscape Architects:PWP Landscape
Architecture, ICN Design
• Interior Designer:Benoy
• Civil & Structure Engineer:RSP Architects
Planners & Engineers (Pte) Ltd
• Mechanical &
Electrical Engineer:Mott Macdonald
Singapore Pte Ltd
• Quality Surveyor:Arcadis Singapore
• Civil:RSP Architects Planners & Engineers
(Pte) Ltd
• Structure Engineer:RSP Architects
Planners & Engineers (Pte) Ltd
• Country:Singapore
• Jewel is an integrated project at the
Singapore Airport that creates a multi-
sensory experience of nature within a
climate-controlled glass dome. An eight-acre
garden over interior retail space integrates
unexpected features that will attract
adventurers of all ages. Gardens terrace
down nearly 30 meters to a central gathering
space with informal amphitheater seating.
Restaurants and cafes as well as an event
plaza can all be accessed from within the
garden. Visitors can experience a light and
water show at the center of the building,
where water and captured rain fall from the
roof becoming a projection screen.
Straw Bales School, Malawi
• Founder & Principal: Nuru Karim
Design Team : Nuru Karim, Dhruval
Shah, Salai VV, Aditya Jain, Uttara
Rajawat, Anjana Varma, Rohit DJ
• Architecture firm NUDES has released
details of their proposed secondary
school in Malawi, constructed from
straw bales. Responding to a brief
focused on modularity, incremental
expansion, deployment, and sustainable
technology, the scheme is formed of a
modular “ladder” component deployed
to create a structural system that houses
the pedagogical intent of the school.
In addition to housing the
technological and pedagogical
components of the scheme, the
ladder also facilitates the overall
“bottom-up” ethos of the scheme,
encouraging the use of local
materials and community
participation. Local materials such
as straw bale cubes are injected
with voids for light and ventilation,
creating a breathable skin. The
system, which could also use earth
and terracotta, is intended to be
easy to repair, and advocate local
construction practices.
Guangzhou Opera House
PERA HOUSE
GUANGZHOU, CHINA