Design Practice of Transformation of GRiD Project in Singapore
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.71411/rae-2025-v1i1-546关键词:
GRiD retrofit; existing-building activation; social stair; placemaking operations; post-industrial aesthetics摘要
The GRiD commercial retrofit project in Singapore adopts a “light-intervention, high-activation” strategy to transform a dilapidated property in the Selegie Arts District into a youth-oriented retail-education-social hub. The design focuses on the building’s corner—the primary urban interface—by introducing two key elements: a luminous “beacon” façade and a cascading “social stair”. These interventions rebrand the visual anchor and reconfigure circulation: low-rent, interior tenancies are relocated to high-value street-front positions, significantly enhancing rental yield, while a disused four-storey atrium is re-programmed as a multi-level outdoor dining market. Terraced seating integrated into the façade provides a 24-hour “Instagrammable” landscape. Ancillary spaces such as restrooms, study zones and automated retail are re-curated as participatory digital backdrops. Clad in neon-infused post-industrial graphics, GRiD establishes a distinctive dialogue with the adjacent School of the Arts (SOTA) and legacy shopping centres, delivering simultaneous gains in commercial return, cultural identity and urban vitality. The project offers a replicable paradigm for adaptive reuse in high-density Asian cities.