Modernist 100.
The Modernist 100 list is a work in progress. It is an on-going documentation of the significant modernist buildings in Singapore. Do you see any significant building or landscape missing from this list? Please let us know here.
There is a large number and great diversity of buildings in Singapore that can be considered as modern. By modern, we are referring to not just architectural aesthetics but also constructional and environmental techniques, socio-economic processes, cultures, and political rationalities. The quantity and diversity are rooted in Singapore’s short but vibrant history variously as a colonial port city, a post-independent developmental state, and a contemporary global city. In this short introduction of the inventory list, we provide a brief sketch of how the shortlisted modernist buildings help to bring this rich socio-cultural history to life. Read the full statement >
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Science Centre Singapore
Year: 1977
Architect: Raymond Woo Associates
Raymond Woo House
Year: 1993
Architect: Raymond Woo
Yan Kit Swimming Pool
Year: 1952
Architect: W. Irving Watson, City Council
Pasir Panjang Power Station
Year: 1953
Architect: Donald Cameron Rae, Municipal Architect
Former Singapore Badminton Hall
Year: 1952
Architect: Ng Keng Siang
Lee Kip Lin House
Year: 1973
Architect: Lee Kip Lin
Yishun 10
Year: 1992
Architect: Geoff Malone
63-66 Yung Kang Road
Year: c. 1973
Architects: Jurong Town Corporation
Toa Payoh Town Centre
Year: 1973
Architects: Housing & Development Board
Tan Boon Liat Building
Year: 1976
Architects: Chok & Associates
Tampines North Community Club
Year: 1989 (Completed); 1992 (Extension)
Architects: Mok Wei Wei and William Lim, William Lim Associates
Jurong Hill Lookout Tower
Year: 1969
Architects: Jurong Town Corporation
Park Road Development
Year: 1968
Architects: Tan Wee Lee, Peter B.K. Soo, Seet Chay Tuan, Housing and Development Board
Shenton House
Year: 1975
Architect: Tay Joo Teck Chartered Architect
Colonnade Condominium
Year: 1986
Architect: Paul Rudolph, in association with Chao Tse Ann & Partners
The Concourse
Year: 1994
Architect: Paul Rudolph, in association with Architects 61
Chee Tong Temple
Year: 1987
Architect: Tay Kheng Soon, Akitek Tenggara
Darul Aman Mosque
Year: 1986
Architect: Asaduz Zaman, Housing Development Board
The Arcadia
Year: 1983
Architects: George J. Wimberly and Chua Ka Seng
OCBC Centre
Year: 1976
Architect: I. M. Pei and BEP Akitek
* The difference between a building being “threatened” and “not conserved” is not always a clear cut one. For this website, we classify a building as being “threatened” under a few circumstances—1. when it has been put up for sale by its owner(s) and there is a likelihood that it might be demolished in the name of redevelopment, 2. when it has been left empty and without tenants for a while and might be awaiting redevelopment, and/or 3. when a notice for demolition and redevelopment has been put up.