To enhance Singapore's cityscape and environmental quality many tall trees and pine trees visible from the surrounding roads were planted in an informal layout around the site. Attempts were also made to enhance an otherwise flat site by the intentional creation of mounds and the lifting-up of grass to enhance softscape visibility within the site. Flanking the main landscape axis and central space are more intimate garden spaces linked with garden pavillions and BBQ pits connected with curvilinear pathways.
Geometric forms were integrated with landforms to create changes of levels out of a flat site – high at the entrance waterfeature, low at the adult pool, high at the circular landform earth mound, low at the bottom of the kid’s pool and high again at the Clubhouse and top of the Children’s pool – different parts of the landscape are therefore revealed at different instances in time as one walks through the development.
As elements of fun and humour, the Jacuzzi and Fun Pool has fog jets and sculptured "wildlife" Brass Frog Sculptures with water jets. The Jacuzzi pool is the start of the Adult pool and this widens out into the lower portion of the number "8" to form a rounded circle of water with a 25M diameter across its width. The Children’s pool also has Frog Sculptures at its front edge to animate the water for children’s play.
| Completed: | 1999 | | Client: | CapitaLand Ltd | | Architect: | DP Architects Pte Ltd |
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