Constructing Singapore Public Space
17 August 2017
6.00pm – 7.30pm. Registration from 5.30pm, seated by 6.00pm
Yale-NUS Performance Hall
Resources
Lecture Video & Photos
URA’s PubliCity event, 2015. Photo Credit: URA Library Archives
Synopsis
While widely recognised as a global city, Singapore is a multiracial city-state, and its public space takes on multiple, incoherent identities that do not reflect established and primarily Western ideas of public space. The book, Constructing Singapore Public Space, takes this as a starting point to frame the notion of public space in Singapore. Everyday urban practices and spatial design over time, and in specific places such as Orchard Road, Little India and housing estates, have helped create a Singapore version of public space that is unique to us.
A brief presentation of the book will be followed by a discussion with a distinguished panel from academia and practice, and an interactive discussion with the audience on the idea of Singapore public space.
Lecture Report
Non-hierarchical, pluralistic, and a space where people negotiate in their everyday life. These are some
defining characteristics of Singapore’s public spaces, said Dr. Hee Limin at the launch of her book,
Constructing Singapore Public Space.
The director of research at CLC detailed the historical evolution of public spaces in the city, noting how
their social uses and discourses within them do not fit neatly into the established, mainly, Western
theories and models. Instead, the Singapore’s public spaces are home to a variety of spatial practices
that play an important role in shaping both state-people and people-people relationships.
One example is in public housing estates, which Dr. Hee noted have shifted from “pragmatic spacing
between buildings” to become “a focus of community building and tangible images of liveability”. This
evolution of public spaces from “spaces to networks” has been carved out by residents through their
everyday use, resulting in a “spatial culture and social systems that may sometimes surprise the town
planner.”
Such dichotomies have also played out differently in Singapore’s
other public spaces. For instance, Little India is a space for both
insiders and outsiders, and also contains temporal spaces occupied
by weekend crowds and subversive ones such as the Desker Road
red-light area. The city’s main retail belt, Orchard Road, however,
is a space of friction where ideas of self and others are constantly
evolving as people visit the direct for work and to encounter
diversity.
On how these different types of spaces shape social relationships,
Dr. Hee explained that the question to ask is what form democracy
has taken within the idea of public space and practice. “In
Singapore’s context, public space is the medium through which
negotiation takes place through recurrent everyday spatial
practices,” she said. “In simple terms, Singaporean identity and
Singaporean public space is developed not just by talking and
sharing ideas but by doing things together.”
As social landscapes continue to change, Dr. Hee urged urban
planners to develop networks of public spaces rather than
homogenous and undefined ones. “There’s a need to create more
concentrated experiences, greater varieties in choice of spaces
for Singapore’s increasingly diverse population, and create new
adjacencies for encounters between different groups. We need
new opportunities for new stakeholders in public space, so that the
publicness of public space is preserved.”
During the panel discussion, Professor Peter Rowe of Harvard
University wondered if the development of Singapore’s public
spaces had something to offer the world. As spaces that are
defined by the spatial practices of its users, he likened Singapore’s
public spaces to theatrical sets where actors and props shift with
time to give “different kinds of tones and tenors”.
“Singapore is also about a plurality of spatial occasions that allows
us to make of the space what we will and move on. This is a very
contemporary idea, one that is rather liberating and one that I
hope Singapore hangs on to,” said Professor Rowe. He added that
urban designers ought to differentiate between space as an event
versus a container. “We need to shift the discussion of spacemaking into a realm that’s probably a lot more performanceoriented, contemporary and has a temporality to it.”
Expanding on this notion, Dr. Hee noted how void decks in public
housing estates are transformed into community spaces by
simple actions of the residents, such as the elderly bringing down
some plastic chairs. This is why public space design should grow
with spatial cultures so as to stay relevant to people’s everyday
lives. “As a designer, we should design something that’s not too
bounded, then you observe and you study, and you see what
happens, and you do more when people get together and add
more design elements, differentiate the space.”
Even as public discussion increasingly happens online today,
Dr. Hee says these virtual spaces are often self-selecting and
reinforce certain ways of thinking. This is why physical public
spaces are still valuable to the city.
“Good public spaces are those where you create adjacencies and
places of friction; where different groups get a chance to bump into
each other,” she said. “You become richer for the experience and
build knowledge. That develops and transforms spaces and the
identities of people in the end.”
Written by Alvin Chua. This report first appeared in the
Sep 2017 Better Cities newsletter.
About the Speakers
AUTHOR AND PANELLIST
Dr Limin Lee
Director,
Centre for Liveable Cities;
Author of “Constructing Singapore Public Space”
Dr Limin Hee is Director of Research at Singapore’s Centre for Liveable
Cities, where she focuses on research strategies, content development
and international collaborations. Dr Hee’s own research focuses on
urban liveability and sustainability and their agenda for architecture,
urbanism and public space. Recent book publications include Constructing
Singapore Public Space (Springer-Nature, 2017) and Future Asian Space
(NUS Press, 2012).
PANELLIST
Mr Michael Koh
Fellow,
Centre for Liveable Cities;
Former Chief Executive Officer, National Heritage Board
Mr Michael Koh has 25 years of experience in the public service
including 7 years as CEO of the National Heritage Board and 4 years
concurrently as CEO of the National Art Gallery. He was also the former
Director of Urban Planning & Design at the Urban Redevelopment
Authority where he spearheaded the planning and urban design of the
new mixed use Downtown at Marina Bay, revitalisation of Orchard Road
as a shopping street and creation of an arts and entertainment district
at BrasBasah Bugis.
PANELLIST
Prof Peter Rowe
Raymond Garbe Professor of Architecture and Urban Design;
Distinguished Service Professor,
Harvard University
Prof Peter Rowe is a recognised critic and lecturer in the field of
architecture and urban design, and served as Dean of the Graduate
School of Design at Harvard from 1992 to 2004. His research and
consulting focus includes cultural interpretation and design, urban form,
economic development, historic conservation, housing provision and
resource sustainability, among others.
PANELLIST
Dr Jane M. Jacobs
Professor, Social Sciences (Urban Studies),
Yale-NUS College
Dr Jane M. Jacobs is Professor of Urban Studies at Yale-NUS College. She
has published widely on the themes of heritage, cities of difference and
postcolonial urbanisms. Her most recent co-authored book is Buildings
Must Die: A Perverse View of Architecture (MIT Press, 2014). Her current
research is on the relationship between professional and everyday
practises of building research and innovation.