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Open Courtyard House: Indoor-Outdoor Living Around a Pool and Garden

FeaturedOpen Courtyard House: Indoor-Outdoor Living Around a Pool and Garden

Open Courtyard House is a private residence in Singapore by Wallflower Architecture + Design, conceived as a luminous house organized around an internal courtyard, pool, and garden. Designed in 2024, the project draws daylight and air deep into the plan, reaching even a sunken basement garden. Travertine, teak, white marble, and walnut plywood keep the rooms calm and visually continuous.

Plumeria Courtyard House: Rooflines Shape an Intimate Garden

Plumeria Courtyard House: Rooflines Shape an Intimate Garden

Plumeria Courtyard House unfolds as a new private house in Singapore by K2LD Architects, organized around a remembered grove of plumeria trees. The courtyard at its center anchors a long, screened driveway and an L-shaped composition that protects family life from close neighbors while keeping the beloved garden in view. Angular roofs, operable louvers, and calm interior finishes tie this daily sequence of approach, arrival, and retreat into one coherent experience.

In a Park by L ARCHITECTS

In a Park by L ARCHITECTS

In a Park sits in Singapore, Singapore as a compact home reworked by L ARCHITECTS for a client whose life now orbits around plants. The project transforms an original three-bedroom apartment into a place where horticulture meets everyday routines, using material choices and careful planning to support a growing collection of greenery. It reads as both a renovation and a quiet manifesto on how domestic life can grow alongside living things.

Raumplan House: From Garden to Atrium

Raumplan House: From Garden to Atrium

Raumplan House stands in Singapore as an inter-terrace house by Formwerkz Architects, planned for a young family who straddles quiet everyday life and lively gatherings. The project navigates a sloping party-wall site with a sectional approach that pulls light, air, and planted volume into the heart of the home. Together, client and architect pursue a house that feels open yet still holds pockets for retreat and close conversation.

Halcyon House by Ming Architects

FeaturedHalcyon House by Ming Architects

Halcyon House is a family house in Singapore by Ming Architects, conceived as a bright retreat for daily life and generous entertaining. A raised double-height living room, feature staircase, and car porch lounge anchor the home, while carefully chosen materials keep the interiors mellow and calm. The result is a layered composition where light, shadow, and volume shape how the family and their friends gather and move.

Hideaway House by Ming Architects

FeaturedHideaway House by Ming Architects

Hideaway House stands on an elevated plot in eastern Singapore, shaped by Ming Architects as both climate response and urban refuge. The house rises three metres above the street to meet flood regulations and push daily life away from the traffic, turning the main rooms inward toward filtered light, private gardens, and quiet views. An intricate skin of metal screens and natural finishes deepens the sense of withdrawal from the suburban row outside.

Breeze House — Monsoon-Breezed Courtyards Shape Relaxed Family Life

Breeze House — Monsoon-Breezed Courtyards Shape Relaxed Family Life

Breeze House sets a quiet yet confident tone for terrace living in Singapore, where Mark 12 Architects centers passive performance and day-to-day comfort. This house rethinks the intermediate terrace type around a continuous breezeway that pulls in monsoon winds, daylight, and greenery. Inside, contemporary living unfolds across open volumes that blur the line between interior rooms and semi-outdoor courts, giving the residents a close, changing relationship with climate and weather.

Verandah House by Mark 12 Architects

Verandah House by Mark 12 Architects

Verandah House stands in Singapore as a compact house shaped by Mark 12 Architects around light, greenery, and a demanding urban edge. The three-level home layers courtyards, balconies, and gardens to temper the presence of a neighboring MRT station while drawing nature into daily routines. Eclectic interiors pair oriental references with contemporary lines, turning each level into a backdrop for art, gathering, and quiet work.

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