Alila Villas Uluwatu

The multi-award-winning Alila Villas Uluwatu resort is located in the Bukit Peninsula of Bali, a wild landscape of cliffs and rugged savannah landscapes, totally unlike the rest of the island. The resort redefines luxury as delight and enjoyment of the natural beauty and sense of place, rather than excessive consumption – making it one of the first ecologically sustainable luxury resorts of the region.

Working on all scales, WOHA developed the masterplan of the entire property, which includes Alila Villas Uluwatu and the OMNIA Dayclub, the architecture for the resort, the interiors as well as a suite of furniture.

The 50-suite hotel and 34 residential villas were built from mainly locally sourced materials, such as limestone from the site and recycled railways sleepers. It was inspired by the pale limestone cliffs and the deep blue of the sea and references Bali’s rich culture with its centuries of influences, from the Bronze Age animism, to the Hindu Majapahit Empire as well as Dutch Art Deco and contemporary modern design.

2011

  • International Architecture Award - Winner

    Awarded by The Chicago Athenaeum and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies

  • ULI Awards for Excellence - Asia Pacific Finalist

    Awarded by Urban Land Institute

  • RIBA International Awards - Winner

    Awarded by Royal Institute of British Architects

2010

  • 2010 Good Design Award - Winner

    Awarded by The Chicago Athenaeum and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies

  • Design for Asia Awards - Bronze Award

    Awarded by Hong Kong Design Centre

  • Gold Key Award for Excellence in Hospitality Design - Winner

    “Best Hotel Design” category, awarded by International Hotel/Motel & Restaurant Show

  • World Architecture Festival - World Holiday Building of the Year

    Holiday category, awarded by World Architecture Festival

  • Asia-Pacific Interior Design Biennial Awards - Winner

    “Outstanding Design” Award, awarded by Asia Pacific Federation of Architects/ Interior Designers

  • Asia-Pacific Interior Design Biennial Awards - Winner

    “Best Design Client” Award, awarded by Asia Pacific Federation of Architects/ Interior Designers

  • Asia-Pacific Interior Design Biennial Awards - Winner

    “Best Aesthetics Conception” Award, awarded by Asia Pacific Federation of Architects/ Interior Designers

  • National Commendation for International Architecture - Commended

    Awarded by Australian Institute of Architects

  • 10th SIA Architectural Design Awards 2010 - Honorable Mention

    Commercial Projects category, awarded by SIA

  • 10th SIA Architectural Design Awards 2010 - Honorable Mention

    Interior Architecture category, awarded by SIA

  • BCI Green Design Award - Green Leadership Award Winner

    Commercial category, awarded by BCI Asia Construction Information Pte. Ltd.

  • ULI Awards for Excellence - Asia Pacific Finalist

    Awarded by Urban Land Institute

  • 6th Annual Hospitality Design Awards - Finalist

    Resort category, awarded by Hospitality Design Magazine

  • Earth-Minded Awards - First Place Winner

    Hospitality Projects, awarded by Hospitality Design magazine and the American Society of Interior Designers

2009

  • Best of Year Awards - Winner

    Hospitality: Hotel-Resort category, awarded by Interior Design Magazine

  • Green Good Design Award - Winner

    Awarded by The Chicago Athenaeum and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies

2007

  • MIPIM Architectural Review Future Project Awards 2007 - Commended

    Retail & Leisure Category, awarded by The Architectural Review

SkyVille @ Dawson

Whilst many cities are struggling to house their populations in humane conditions, this project sets a very high standard for subsidized housing, not only providing excellent homes, but setting these within a three dimensional matrix of community space to ensure that strong bonds are formed between neighbours.

SkyVille @ Dawson is a public housing project commissioned by the Housing and Development Board of Singapore on a strict public sector budget. Three main themes – community, variety and sustainability – form the basis of the design.

Each home is designed to be part of a Sky Village comprising 80 homes that share a naturally-ventilated community terrace and skygarden. Every tower is composed of 4 vertically stacked Sky Villages, with the 3 towers linked horizontally. Despite the 960 homes, there is not a single internal corridor in the development. Public space for various types and sizes of community groups are distributed through the towers and the ground plane, and are fully open to the public. The entire roof is a public park with a 300m walking track.

Sky Green

Sky Green a mixed-use development located at the heart of Taichung in a densely developed and vibrant neighborhood. The site is made up of two rectangular plots, one facing the main city thoroughfare, Gongyi Road, and the other facing Daying Street, a quieter secondary street. The development consists of two 26-storey residential towers with apartment units from level 4 onwards, as well as retail spaces. To connect to its setting, and the hustle and bustle of the streets, the building’s retail spaces are located from ground level to level 3. The shops have staggered patterned glass cladding to give an urban backdrop to the tree-lined pedestrian walkways and modern outdoor street furniture.

Away from the busy street life an intimate, serene landscaped courtyard greets the residents as they return to their homes. Above the retail shops rise the two residential towers as well as generous recreation facilities for indoor and outdoor activities. Both towers have deeply recessed windows and the façades are enveloped with protruding balconies with trees, sky gardens and mesh screens that serve as a trellis for green creeper plants. Landscaping is treated as a key material in creating the building envelope for the residential towers. The façade elements create deep sun-shading and the greenery acts as an active and living interface between the interior and exterior environment.

Large sky terraces at every five floors within the block extend the living space of residents from indoors to outdoors, creating a biophilic environment within a high-rise development. Every unit is visually connected to greenery outside their apartment windows. A series of open, yet sheltered sky gardens, terraces, balconies and planters create a breathable façade and visual interest, enhancing the real estate value of these apartments in a densely built up area while providing spatial relief to apartment owners.

 

 

2021

  • CTBUH Best Tall Building Award - Award of Excellence

    Residential/Hotel category, awarded by the Council on Tall Building & Urban Habitat

  • CTBUH Best Tall Building Award - Award of Excellence

    100m-199m height category, awarded by the Council on Tall Building & Urban Habitat

2020

  • Good Design Award - Winner

    Awarded by The Chicago Athenaeum and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies

  • World Architecture Festival (China) Awards - Excellent Design Award Winner

    Awarded by the World Architecture Festival

  • World Architecture Festival (China) Awards - Excellent Design Award Winner

    Awarded by World Architecture Festival

  • 19th SIA Architectural Design Awards - Building of the Year

    Commercial Projects category, awarded by the Singapore Institute of Architects

  • 19th SIA Architectural Design Awards - Design Award

    Commercial Projects category, awarded by the Singapore Institute of Architects

The Met

Most tropical high-rise housing in developing countries replicate cold-climate models with sealed facades, reliant on air-conditioning. However, in the tropics, light winds, year-round balmy weather, constant temperatures and high humidity make outdoor living desirable. This high density (Plot Ratio 10.1) provides a model of a naturally ventilated, perforated, indooroutdoor, green tower, which is a necessary alternative to the sealed, glazed curtain wall buildings being erected across the tropical regions.

The apartments are houses in the sky with breezeways, full exposure to light and views, outdoor living areas, planters and high-rise gardens, and open-air communal terraces with barbeques, libraries, spas and other facilities.

Sky terraces, both private and public, link the blocks every 5 storeys, creating dramatic yet human-scaled external spaces. The building is planted on every horizontal surface, including private balconies. Vertical faces are shaded by creeper screens. All apartments are cross ventilated, and all face north and south. The staggered block arrangement gives apartments light and air on all four sides. The design makes possible living without airconditioning.

Thai elements– ceramic tiles, textiles and timber paneling – are abstracted to organize forms. The cladding reinterprets Thai temple tiles, the staggered balconies recalls traditional timber paneling. The walls incorporate random mirrored stainless steel panels, a contemporary interpretation of the sparkling mirrors of Thai temples.

2013

  • Aga Khan Award for Architecture - Shortlisted

    Awarded by the Aga Khan Trust for Culture.

2011

  • RIBA Lubetkin Prize - Winner

    Awarded by Royal Institute of British Architects.

  • International Architecture Award - Winner

    Awarded by The Chicago Athenaeum and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies

  • Green Good Design Award - Winner

    Awarded by The Chicago Athenaeum and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies

  • Green Good Design Award - Winner

    Awarded by The Chicago Athenaeum and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies

2010

  • The International Highrise Award 2010 - Winner

    Awarded by City of Frankfurt, Deutsches Architekturmuseum and DekaBank

  • The Jorn Utzon Award for International Architecture - Winner

    Awarded by Australian Institute of Architects.

  • RIBA International Awards - Winner

    Awarded by Royal Institute of British Architects

  • BCI Green Design Award - Green Leadership Award Winner

    Multiple Houses category, awarded by BCI Asia Construction Information Pte. Ltd.

2009

  • President's Design Award 2009 - Design of the Year

    Awarded by the DesignSingapore Council and Urban Redevelopment Authority

  • World Architecture Festival - Finalist

    Housing category, awarded by World Architecture Festival

  • CTBUH 2009 Best Tall Building Award - Finalist

    Awarded by Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat

2008

  • 2007 Emporis Skyscraper Awards - Silver Award Winner

    Silver Award Winner, awarded by Emporis

2006

  • Asian Habitat Award for Planning and Designing - Winner

    Awarded by Asian Habitat Society

2005

  • MIPIM Architectural Review Future Project Awards 2006 - Winner

    Tall Buildings Category, awarded by The Architectural Review

Oasia Hotel Downtown

Oasia Hotel Downtown sets out to create an alternative imagery for commercial high-rise developments. It combines innovative ways to intensify land use with a tropical approach that showcases a perforated, permeable, furry, verdant tower of green in the heart of Singapore’s Central Business District (CBD).

In programmatic response to the client’s brief of having distinct Soho, Hotel & Club rooms, WOHA adopted a club sandwich approach by creating a series of different strata, each with its own sky garden. Introducing layers of elevated ground levels allow the precious but limited ground floor space to be multiplied, creating generous public areas for recreation and social interaction throughout the high-rise.

2018

  • President's Design Award - Design of the Year

    Awarded by the DesignSingapore Council and Urban Redevelopment Authority

  • CTBUH Urban Habitat Award - Winner

    Awarded by Council of Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, Chicago, Illinois

  • Best Tall Building Worldwide - Winner

    Awarded by Council of Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, Chicago, Illinois

  • Best Tall Building Asia & Australasia - Winner

    Awarded by Council of Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, Chicago, Illinois

2017

  • Good Design Award - Winner

    Awarded by The Chicago Athenaeum and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies

  • 2017-18 ULI Global Awards for Excellence - Winner

    Awarded by Urban Land Institute

  • NParks Skyrise Greenery Award - Winner

    Outstanding and Excellence Award, awarded by National Parks Board, Singapore

  • 17th SIA Architectural Design Awards 2017 - Building of the Year

    Commercial (Mixed Development) category, awarded by the Singapore Institute of Architects

  • 2017 International Chapter Architecture Awards - Commendation

    Commercial Architecture category, awarded by Australian Institute of Architects

  • Green Good Design Award - Winner

    Awarded by The Chicago Athenaeum and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies

2016

  • 2016 Emporis Skyscraper Awards - 3rd Place

    Awarded by Emporis

2004

  • 7th SIA Architectural Design Awards 2004 - Design Award

    Residential Projects/Apartments & Condominiums Category, awarded by the Singapore Institute of Architects

443 Queen Street

The design of 443 Queen Street tower explores the potential of passive, low-technology, high-ambiance design for the sub-tropical climate.

Urbanistically, the development opens itself up to the city. At the river level, the pedestrian realm flows under the giant umbrella of the hanging gardens, to the cafe and restaurant which inhabit the base of the building.

The cluster form of the tower allows further views through the site and allows spatial relationships with the diverse surrounding fabric to be developed. The units fully exploit their access to views, light and air.

School of The Arts

This project is a hybrid between a specialist arts high school and paerforming arts centre, and is a machine for breezes, located in dense, tropical inner city Singapore. The School of the Arts, Singapore (SOTA) is thoughtfully designed not only to provide a safe and stimulating environment for learning, but also places of delight for the public.

The podium contains a music auditorium, drama theatre, black box theatre and several informal performing spaces. To enhance the vibrancy of the city, shops are provided along the external covered walkway and a large civic amphitheatre is created under the canopy of large conserved trees. The sectional relationship between gathering spaces on different levels allows for easy ventilation and a comfortable microclimate, with barrier free access incorporated throughout the building.

The academic blocks are designed for natural ventilation with breezeways in-between the blocks. Gardens on the top of decks cut out heat gain, absorb carbon, and provide shady outdoor break-out spaces and play areas, while green facades cut out glare and dust, keep classrooms cool and dampen traffic noise. These seamless indoor-outdoor spaces with comfortable microclimates allow different sized groups to interact and relax without leaving the secure environment of the school.

2011

  • Best of Year Awards - Winner

    Educational – International category, awarded by Interior Design Magazine

  • President's Design Award - Design of the Year

    Awarded by the DesignSingapore Council and Urban Redevelopment Authority

  • The Jørn Utzon Award for International Architecture - Winner

    Awarded by Australian Institute of Architects.

  • International Architecture Award - Winner

    Awarded by The Chicago Athenaeum and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies

  • Green Good Design Award - Winner

    Awarded by The Chicago Athenaeum and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies

  • RIBA International Awards - Winner

    Awarded by Royal Institute of British Architects

2010

  • World Architecture Festival - World Learning Building of the Year

    Learning category, awarded by World Architecture Festival

2005

  • Singapore Arts School Competition, 2005 - Winner

    Awarded by Singapore’s Ministry of Information, Communications & the Arts

Parkroyal Collection Pickering

At home in central Singapore, between the central business district and Chinatown, the Parkroyal Collection Pickering captures passersbys’ attention with its striking lush, green terraces. The project is a study of how we can not only conserve our greenery in a built-up high-rise city centre but multiply it in a manner that is architecturally striking, integrated and sustainable.

Inspired by Hong Lim Park, which is located next to the site, rice terraces and the topography of natural landscapes, the building brings 15,000 square metres of greenery – around double the area of the site – back into the city. Every one of the 367 guest rooms offers a tropical garden view from its windows.

The passive strategies such as naturally ventilated corridors, solar-powered irrigation, rain water retention and sun shading have helped this project to achieve Singapore’s Green Mark Platinum rating, the nation’s highest environmental certification.

2019

  • SGBC-BCA Sustainability Leadership Awards 2019 - Design Award

    Leadership in Sustainable Design and Performance (Commercial), awarded by Singapore Green Building Council and Building and Construction Authority, Singapore

2016

  • 16th SIA Architectural Design Awards 2016 - Design Award

    Commercial Projects category, awarded by SIA

2015

  • MIPIM Asia Awards - Gold Winner

    Best Hotel and Tourism Development category, awarded by Reed MIDEM

  • Landscape Excellence Assessment Framework (LEAF) - Outstanding Project

    Awarded by National Parks Board, Singapore

  • CTBUH Urban Habitat Award - Winner

    Awarded by Council of Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, Chicago, Illinois

2014

  • Design for Asia Awards - Grand Award

    Awarded by Hong Kong Design Centre

  • International Architecture Awards - Winner

    Commercial category, awarded by Australian Institute of Architects

  • NParks Skyrise Greenery Award - Winner

    Outstanding Skyrise Greenery Project Award, awarded by National Parks Board, Singapore

  • Iconic Awards - Best of Best Winner

    Architecture (Public) category, awarded by German Design Council

  • Green Good Design Award - Winner

    Awarded by The Chicago Athenaeum and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies

     

2013

  • Good Design Award - Winner

    Awarded by The Chicago Athenaeum and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies

  • Best of Year Awards - Winner

    Hotel (Public Space) category, awarded by Interior Design Magazine

  • President's Design Award 2013 - Design of the Year

    Awarded by DesignSingapore Council and Urban Redevelopment Authority

  • Gold Key Award for Excellence in Hospitality Design - Honorable Mention

    “Best Hotel – Luxury / Upscale” category, awarded by International Hotel / Motel & Restaurant Show

  • INSIDE Festival - Winner

    Hotels (Interior) category, awarded by INSIDE Festival

  • World Architecture Festival - Finalist

    Hotels (Large) category, awarded by World Architecture Festival

  • CTBUH Best Tall Building Awards (Asia and Australasia) - Finalist

    Awarded by Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat

  • WAN Hotel of the Year Award - Winner

    Awarded by World Architecture News.com

  • 9th Annual Hospitality Design Awards - Finalist

    Hotel (Luxury/Upscale) category, awarded by Hospitality Design Magazine

2010

  • World Architecture Festival - Finalist

    Future Projects (Commercial) category, awarded by World Architecture Festival

  • BCI Green Design Award - Green Leadership Award Winner

    Multiple Houses category, awarded by BCI Asia Construction Information Pte. Ltd.