Part 4: Aging with Dignity - Kampung Admiralty

Our third day, May 9, began with an insightful morning visit to Kampung Admiralty, a development that redefines aging community living. Often heralded as Singapore’s first vertical kampung (village), this award-winning project by WOHA Architects combines public housing, healthcare, retail, and communal spaces within a single integrated complex.

Kampung Admiraly (Image Credit: WOHA Architects)



Vertical Integration for Social Sustainability

Open plaza on ground floor

Food court at first floor

As we approached the development, its layered façade and abundant greenery stood out against the city’s urban backdrop. The vertical zoning strategy was both functional and symbolic. The ground and podium levels hosted a bustling food court, retail shops, and medical clinics. Above them, community gardens, elder-friendly amenities, and residential blocks extended into the sky, stitched together with accessible walkways and resting spots.

What impressed me was the development’s ability to foster intergenerational interaction in such a compact footprint. Elderly residents were seen chatting along the benches, doing morning exercises on green terraces, and queueing for groceries just floors below their homes. Every architectural move seemed to prioritize dignity, independence, and community.



Passive Design and Environmental Responsiveness

Community garden on rooftop

Central courtyard view from the NTUC Health Active Ageing Centre

WOHA’s hallmark sustainability strategies were everywhere. Natural ventilation channels, sun-shading elements, and rainwater harvesting systems reduced the need for mechanical systems. The rooftop gardens did not only offer a place for socializing—they acted as thermal buffers and biodiversity nodes. The landscape design incorporated native flora, enhancing both the environmental and emotional quality of the space.

Direct connection to MRT

Beyond form, the project was deeply functional. Public amenities were directly connected to transportation hubs, encouraging easy movement across the city. Healthcare services catered specifically to geriatric needs. Every level of the building was wheelchair accessible and elderly-friendly.



A Model for Aging in Asia

Kampung Admiralty offered profound lessons for Malaysia and the region. With Southeast Asia facing a demographic shift toward an aging population, our urban models must evolve. Traditional kampung life once offered proximity, support, and familiarity. In dense urban contexts, how do we recreate that?

This project proposes an answer: through integrated, multigenerational, vertical communities that address both physical and emotional needs. In Malaysia, aging is often seen as a private matter. But here, it is a collective architectural responsibility.



Key Takeaways:

  • Architecture can reduce urban loneliness by fostering daily interactions.
  • Integration of healthcare, housing, and social spaces supports aging in place.
  • Sustainability must address both ecological and human resilience.

As we departed for Johor, I felt inspired—and challenged. Could such thoughtful, context-aware developments be realized in Malaysia? What institutional support, policy reform, and design leadership would it take? These are questions I carry forward in my architectural journey.



[Part 5: Vision vs. Reality - Forest City]

Link:  https://vooikenttravel.blogspot.com/2025/06/part-5-vision-vs-reality-forest-city.html

 

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