The Six Ramsgate Residence by Wallflower Architecture
Wallflower Architecture have recently completed the Six Ramsgate Residence in Singapore.
Full description after the photos….













Photographer: Albert Lim
Project Description
The client’s desire for the home to have a perception of substantial private space has resulted in the development of a spatial program that internalizes spaces such as pools and gardens normally regarded as external to the envelope of the house. By zoning spaces such as the bedrooms and servants’ quarters on alternative levels, i.e. 2nd storey and basement levels, the ground plane is freed from walls that would have been required if public and private programs were interlaced on the same plane.
The site is approximately 25m wide by 48m deep, and because of the intermingling of internal gardens and column-free vistas, there is a continuous and unbroken visual depth of 40m that ties together the entrance foyer, swimming pool, formal living area, internal garden court and formal dining areas. These are perceived to be within the built enclosure of the house, yet a very obvious public to private hierarchy assists in the intangible zoning and spatial orientation within the house. This is simply achieved by classical use of symmetry, with important areas axial to the centre line of the house, and with increasingly private space implied by the distance from the main entrance.
The environmental transparencies at ground level and between courtyards are important in passively cooling the house. All the courtyards have differing material finishes and therefore differing heat gain and latency (water, grass, water, granite). As long as there are temperature differences between courtyards, the living, dining, and pool house become conduits for breezes that move in between the courtyards, very much like how land and sea breezes are generated. The use of thick masonry walls on either side of the house keep temperature gradients small within the house and also act as enormous ‘ducting’ in guiding air currents between courtyards. At the second storey, solid hardwood louvers that can be adjusted by hand allow the desired amount of breeze and sunlight to filter through. And at the 1st storey, substantial trellising minimise sun entry into habitable areas.
The planning strategy releases substantial volumes of perceptual as well as tangible space that is normally not experienced if traditional architectural space planning norms are not reinterpreted in our local context. Environmentally, the contiguous and interconnected space encourage the slightest breezes, whether they are prevailing and therefore air-movement is horizontal, or convectionally circulated, which the courtyards help generate. For the owner, it is the experiential serenity that unencumbered space, a gentle breeze, dappled sunlight and the hush of water rippling on a pond that is priceless in our dense and busy urbanscape.
Project Data
Project Title: Six Ramsgate
Location: 6 Ramsgate Road, Singapore
Site Area: 1200 sqm
Built-In Area: 855 sqm
Architecture firm: Wallflower Architecture + Design
Website: www.wallflower.com.sg
Architect-in-charge: Robin Tan
Design Team: Robin Tan, Cecil Chee & Sean Zheng

Andrew James on 13 May 2009 at 3:49 pm #
This is a very exciting home. Very unique concept.
I would love to see it at night , perhaps the lighting is in credible ?
graham on 13 May 2009 at 6:41 pm #
and this is one of the reasons I want to live and work in Singapore
Rudy on 14 May 2009 at 12:10 am #
Exceptional beautiful home.
Reminds me of Shigeru Ban.
myriam on 14 May 2009 at 4:42 am #
wow very beautiful home!!!!! i like the way the sun enter those wood bars.
Nissy on 14 May 2009 at 6:35 am #
wish we could see some night time photos as well. This sure is an axquisite home.
KP on 14 May 2009 at 9:16 am #
When I was first looking at the photos, I would not have thought the client wanted a home of privacy for it is quite open and airy. I absolutely love it and the design concept makes perfect sense meets the request of privacy. Well done! The layout is gorgeous. The openness of the home versus the enclosure perfectly balanced. I love it!
malcolm on 15 May 2009 at 12:53 pm #
nice… but too many parallel lines. they’re everywhere! I think they’d burn into my retinas.
kast on 18 May 2009 at 12:12 am #
its alovely house ,you can see how the shadow fall in the floor ,,stunning…
but u timber floor will be faded as tropics climate is very harsh..