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Insights

Article
A Case Study for Saving Public Housing
A partnership of grassroots activists and the expertise of a small architecture firm has provided a way forward for public housing and its many residents in Victoria
Article
Clay, Cloth and Capital: Southeast Asia’s Kampong Art Economy
Historically, Southeast Asia’s kampongs have quietly turned art into economic power. Today, this creative economic model thrives anew
Article
Art as Public Space: Beyond Decoration to Civic Ownership
Public art is often anything but public, but some initiatives are showing how it can become truly something of the people
Article
The Promise of Jakarta’s RPTRA Kalijodo
The space was envisioned as one of 300 that create places for young people across the city. But is it a model for community spaces or a fading vision?
Article
Paradise & Parking Lots
Car parks take up a large amount of the urban footprint, and often sit empty. Can we move beyond this type of static infrastructure to design spaces that will work for our future cities?
Article
Co-Design Can Marry Design Expertise with Lived Experience
The practice of co-designing with the community has started to take hold in the UK. Three projects demonstrate different approaches, but all have resulted in greater engagement with the resulting spaces, with flow-on societal benefits
Article
Smarten Up: Open-Source Data and the Future of Southeast Asia’s Cities
Across Southeast Asia, the allure of smart cities has often been accompanied by a top-down implementation strategy. But one-size-fits-all solutions can miss opportunities for genuine urban improvement
Article
Designing Age-Friendly Cities
Global populations are ageing, led by cities like Hong Kong. How can designers and planners create spaces that truly are for all, including the elderly?
Article
Art in the Anthropocene: Confronting the Global Environmental Crisis
An increasing number of artists are using their work to tell stories about the environment, with many drawing on their Asian roots
Article
Can Southeast Asian Boat Communities be an Inspiration for Dealing with Climate Change?
An increasing number of cities are being threatened by rising sea levels. If it’s too late to turn back the tide, is it possible to live in harmony with the sea?
Article
Christopher Alexander: The Enduring Influence of An Icon
The work of groundbreaking architect Christopher Alexander gives us both a lens to critique urban design and a toolkit for creating our own spaces
Article
Citywalk Is Here to Stay. What Does It Mean for Urban Design?
The trend is only growing, particularly on the Chinese mainland. What drives it, and how can planners and designers interpret it?
Article
Preserving Kampong Heritage: Balancing Architecture & Culture
Heritage preservation must encompass more than the physical environment. The case of Dakota Crescent in Singapore provides a strong example of how stakeholders can work to preserve tangible and intangible heritage while allowing space for development
Article
Sea-Cities: The Kampongs That Shaped Southeast Asia’s Urban Future
Long before skyscrapers rose, kampongs — maritime trade and cultural hubs — formed the original urban networks of Southeast Asia, shaping the region's cities in ways still felt today
Article
Yogyakarta’s Dilemma:  Infrastructure, Culture and Sustainable Growth
Transit-Oriented Development has shown success in some countries. Can it work in cultural centre Yogyakarta?
Article
Discover the Fascinating History of Kowloon Walled City: A Forgotten Urban Enigma
The End of an Era: Reliving the Demolition Process and the Legacy Left Behind by Kowloon Walled City
Article
Travel Beyond the Ordinary: CityWalk, Shop, and Savour
A travel phenomenon that goes beyond the conventional touristic experience.
Article
The Lasting Legacy of Kampong Spirit: Toa Payoh
Beneath Singapore’s meticulous urban planning and development lies a neighbourhood with a strong community.
Article
Age-Friendly Proximity: Embracing the Golden Age within Reach
Elderly are embracing their golden years in style with youthful enthusiasm. With an ageing population, communities are actively seeking ways to create age-friendly neighbourhoods that promote connected living. 
Article
Era of AI: Embracing AI technology to create sustainable and vibrant cities
In the new era of the digital age, AI technology has become a game changer for the architecture and real estate industries when creating and managing sustainable and vibrant communities. With vast real-time data and machine learning algorithms, architects are embracing the revolutionising power of AI technology to map out and create sustainable, vibrant, and responsive cities with better efficiency. 
Article
Paws in Motion: Unleashing Placemaking Magic through Pets in China
Developers have begun to reach the epiphany of curating inclusive communities and vibrant open spaces to accommodate the new chic lifestyle of the millennials and their furry companions. The elements of open space, pet-friendliness and community formation were brought to light to forge an engaging and pleasing public space through incorporating the innovative and sustainable strategy of placemaking.
Article
Sustainable Conservation to Singapore Kampong Heritage
Amidst the bustling metropolis lies a hidden treasure, waiting to be discovered—the kampongs of Singapore. The conservation of such unique cultural treasures align with Singapore's goal of becoming a City in Nature.
Article
Cultural Tourism: Sustainable and people-centric neighbourhoods
From its awe-inspiring Terracotta Warriors to its Grand Tang Dynasty Ever-bright City, Xian offers a captivating journey of cultural tourism and showcases a plethora of exceptional elements that define a sustainable cultural hub.
Article
Community in Action: Berlin Kreuzberg
With a blend of old and new, east and west architectural landscape, the eclectic, bohemian and quirky Kreuzberg in Germany captured the essence of its culture and history and transformed it into one captivating neighbourhood.
Article
Open-City Concept - an engaging place in Taikoo Li Chengdu
Sino-Ocean Taikoo Li is one of Chengdu’s busiest shopping areas. We explore the possibilities of the Open-City Concept to nurture lively and inclusive communities.
Article
Conserving a Piece of Hong Kong Heritage: Blue House
Blue House, the conserved building serves as a community space and encourages the engagements of public and business sectors, non-profit organisations, and the neighbourhood in the process of cultural and heritage conservation.
Article
Sentul Depot: A Train Ride that brings back Community Heritage
Sentul Depot was transformed by making use of place-making to bring together communities and giving it a new social identity by retaining its historic and cultural characteristics.
Article
Cultural Mosaic Shimo-kitazawa the New urban Tokyo Identity
The new hidden gem in Tokyo, Shimo-kitazawa, is a mixing pot of cultural preservation as well as modern development that bring communities together.
Article
A New Approach to Transit Oriented Developments (TOD) in China
Working with The Oval Partnership, Wedderburn Transport Planning is using an evidence-based approach to develop context-sensitive forms of Open City Design that are culturally and commercially successful, while providing safe and comfortable access to transit stations.
Article
The Living City – The Rise and Fall, and Rise Again of Sir Patrick Geddes
Patrick Geddes is regarded by many as the father of citizen participation, and is renowned for his theories based on the “autonomous community” and “bottom-up” planning. He pioneered the place-making approach, was founder of the urban conservation movement and originated the phrase, “Think Global, Act Local”.
Article
The Million-Dollar Question
Arguably the father of public housing in Hong Kong, Michael Wright was born and grew up in this city with many Chinese friends. He was interned in prison camp during the second world war. His background and personal experience were instrumental to his perseverance of building self-contained flats for the poor.
Article
Hand In Hand
Community Arts Thrive in Hong Kong to Heal A Wounded Society
Article
We are Family
Working towards family well-being centred planning and architecture
Article
People’s Spaces: Bruegel the Elder
What is special about Bruegel is that he used techniques and layouts usually utilized in landscape paintings to depict peasant scenes.
Article
Conservation, Nostalgia, Creativity and Social Progress
Conservation has the potential to redefine what we traditionally regard as Architecture, and drive socio-political progress in contemporary society.
Article
Contemporary Libraries: Work Hard, Play Hard
The best way to learn is through play. When the community finds its neighbourhood library as necessary for both work and play, its longevity is assured.
Article
The “Local” According To He Fan
What truly makes He Fan respectable as a photographic magician is his foresight about the mentality of the contemporary urban dweller, who desires a black-and-white type of the “local” which could well be a figment of imagination in the eye of the beholder.
Article
Let’s Hack the City
How to Make Our Urban Living Environment a Better Place with Creative Interventions
Article
Communal Palaces: Hardware to Complement Software
The symbiosis between social infrastructure and social programmes within them is fundamental to building a more equal and united society, according to American sociologist Eric Klinenberg
Article
Bricks & Mortar: Interpreting Palaces for the People
New York University sociology professor Eric Klinenberg uses first hand accounts of disasters binding communities together to support his book’s rationale that trust requires face to face contact in safe and sheltering environments
Article
Happy Together
How community living rooms in open spaces can bring Hong Kong’s old neighbourhoods back to life
Article
Cities as Puff Pastry
Rather than a particular point on the national territory, a city is more like a space which keeps forces and flows afloat: it neither has or has not a border, but is itself a border through which things get through.
Article
Transforming Neighborhoods
The most successfully cohesive urban regeneration projects understand that community development is as much if not more about the people than the real estate.
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