Tag Archives: Reflections at Keppel Bay

Keppel sells 98% of 700 launched units at Reflections at Keppel Bay devt

Demand for a new waterfront development, Reflections at Keppel Bay, has been positive, with 98 per cent of the 700 launched units sold as at the end of last month.

This was disclosed as the developer Keppel Land topped out the first tower today.

It’s the first of the six glass towers to be completed in the waterfront residence development.

Keppel Land chairman Choo Chiau Beng, who is also CEO of the parent Keppel Group, said positive economic sentiments, an improved job market and the buzz generated by the two integrated resorts, contributed to the return of buying interest in the residential market.

Keppel Land also disclosed that it launched another 30 units at the development for sale over the last weekend due to strong buyer interest.

Reflections at Keppel Bay has been billed as being ecologically responsible, achieving the Green Mark Gold Award by the Building and Construction Authority in 2008.

Reflections at Keppel Bay is master architect Daniel Libeskind’s first residential showcase in Asia.

Source : Channel NewsAsia – 24 Mar 2010

The new design ascetic

Pared down, simplified and minimal, architects are all reassessing what is really essential in life, reports ARTHUR SIM

Claudio Silvestrin, who has designed 18 villas for developer YTL Corp at Sentosa Cove, believes that architecture is akin to ‘composing poetry on earth in partnership with the earth…’.

WHETHER it is because of the constant talk about the economy, wealth destruction or the periodic stockmarket jitters, homeowners appear to have lost the desire to build ever bigger and flashier homes. Instead, the prevailing design aesthetic seems to be more about ascetism, as more people decide that living in excess is just so last century.

One of a kind: A house by Daniel Libeskind – Libeskind presents the world with a new way of living with his prefabricated villa (above) and a house by Mink Tan – who searches for the Asian soul in his architecture (next)

Pared down, simplified and minimal, architects are all reassessing what is really essential in life. Daniel Libeskind, who designed Reflections at Keppel Bay, has perhaps gone a step further by designing a prototype of a house that is prefabricated and can be shipped anywhere in the world. He describes the house as ‘a limited artistic edition of a new space, of a new way of living, a total work of art’.

Called the Libeskind Villa, the four-bedroom house is a composition of three simple interlocking volumes that generate a myriad of geometric spaces. And in keeping with volatile oil prices, it offers maximum insulation and durability, cutting-edge technologies and compliance with some of the toughest energy-saving standards across the world. In designing Libeskind Villa, Mr Libeskind reduces the essence of a home to only the most critical elements and the design just stops short of being austere.

And there is no shame in austerity, especially today. Architect Gwen Tan of Formwerkz has even chosen to celebrate it. Describing a house she is designing for a client, she said that one of the biggest constraints was that the site was so tight it could only accommodate a very small house. Fortunately, her client’s needs were simple and Ms Tan decided that this should be ‘celebrated’. Continue reading