AD ASSIGNMENT
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
•Architects: Zaha Hadid
Architects
•Area: 70000 m²
•Year: 2010
• Guangzhou Opera House
• Architect - Zaha Hadid • Designed in 2002
• Structural Engineer - SHTK, Guangzhou • Built in 2003 -
Pearl River Foreign Investment 2010
Architectural Designing Institute • Land Area 42.000
• Acoustic Engineer - Sir. Harold m2
Marshall • Floor Area 70.000
• Electrical Engineer - Beijing Light & m2
View • Location Guangz
• Construction Company - China hou, Guangdong,
Construction Third Engineering China
Bureau Co. Ltd
• Construction Manager - Guangzhou
Construction
Engineering Supervision Co. Ltd.
•Design
•The structure was designed by Iraqi architect Zaha Hadid. It is conceived as two
rocks washed away by the Pearl River.[8] Its freestanding concrete auditorium set
within an exposed granite and glass-clad steel frame took over five years to build,
and was praised upon opening by architectural critic Jonathan Glancey in The
Guardian, who called it "at once highly theatrical and insistently subtle."
Daniel Libeskind
Military Museum
Berlin
LOCATION - GERMANY DRESDEN
DESIGNER - DANIEL LIBESKIND
PROJECT YEAR - 2011