A slender residential tower on the Tanjong Pagar edge of the city, planned as a stack of homes that each reach for light and air rather than a uniform grid of units. Communal sky terraces every few storeys break the height into legible neighbourhoods and give residents a shared outdoor room with a real view back to the harbour.
On a tight urban plot, the gains are made in section, not plan. We pulled the lift core to one flank so every home runs clear from the city face to a planted loggia, giving cross-ventilation that genuinely works in our climate. The facade is a calm rhythm of deep aluminium fins that shade the glass and quietly mark each floor, so the tower reads as one considered object on the skyline rather than a patchwork of balconies.
At the base, the tower gives back to the street: a shaded colonnade, a small landscaped forecourt and a lobby that opens to the five-foot way it sits beside. The intent throughout was density that still feels civil — a building that adds homes to the centre of Singapore without turning its back on the city around it.