City as Ecosystems, Architecture as Scaffold
PROGRAMME
STUDENT
Chen Ting Yan, Candice
YEAR
2
ADVISOR/TUTOR
A/P Fung John Chye
![](https://cde.nus.edu.sg/arch/wp-content/uploads/sites/32/2020/07/01_Chencandice.jpg)
Cities are often perceived as harsh man-made environments that are antithetical to nature and her abundant biodiversities. The thesis challenges the commonly held notion that the city is opposed to natural ecosystems but rather cities are amenable to natural ecosystems. Underpinning this hypothesis is the anticipation of climate change induced increases in environmental stewardship roles by the community through bottom-up activities and ownership of our future urban-scape. Climate-induced changes are predominantly a resultant of; urbanisation from intense human activities, top-down national policies that disempower the fostering of social resilience and; the city and its functions that dominate the natural ecosystems that led to irreversible damage.
City as Ecosystem
City as Ecosystem, Architecture as Scaffold advances on a new paradigm for homeostasis living in the future urban neighbourhoods of Singapore, where architecture integrates as a scaffolding for generating and sustaining natural ecosystems though biophilic design that empowers the fostering of stewardship within the community to achieve social and urban resilience towards climate change.
Architecture as Scaffold
The Emergent, The Canopy, The Undergrowth, The Estuaries and The Coral Lagoon illustrates the key design strategies of; homeostasis living, biophilic design and the empowerment of stewardship roles for the regeneration of ecosystems and empowerment of social-urban resilience.