At 35 stories, the State Courts Towers at Havelock Square is the tallest government building in Singapore. And while it’s been open since December 2019—when the State Courts started relocating from a nine-story building that dated back to 1975—details and images about its design and construction have only recently been made public by CPG Consultants, the S$450 million (US$334.6 million) project’s Principal Consultant and Architect.
The 178-meter (584-ft) building contains 53 courtrooms and 54 hearing chambers. The structure, designed by Serie + Multiply Consultants, is actually two slender buildings, the Court Tower and Office Tower, connected by 39 link bridges. The design optimizes visibility to the public, with courtroom boxes placed onto large “court trays” of different heights and sizes that are completely open in that there is no glazed façade around the tower.
The towers' 53 courtrooms are placed onto “trays” of different sizes that are “open,” in that there's no glazed facade. Illustration: CPG Consultants
Each “tray” includes a garden terrace that filters sunlight and allows for views of the city. The courtrooms themselves are clad in pigmented precast panels, five to 12 meters in height, whose colors and textures match the tiled roofs of shophouses in Singapore’s nearby Chinatown.
“The relationship between the city and its civic buildings was our primary interest for this project,” explains Christopher Lee, Principal at Serie Architects UK. “The new State Courts Towers should be a building that is symbolically open and accessible to the public. Its design language is drawn from the architecture typical of the city and hence is both familiar and surprisingly new to its citizens.”
The front tower includes the courtrooms and is accessible to the public; the back tower is for judges' chambers and conference rooms. The towers are linked by 39 bridges. lIlustration: CPG Consultants; Image: Khoogj
A SMART, TRANSPARENT BUILDING
The cladding for the courtrooms is precast panels, 5 to 12 ft in height, whose colors and textures match to roofs of nearby shops in Singapore's Chinatown. Image" Finbarr Fallon
The office tower, for judges’ chambers and staff offices, features a vertical façade that expands where light and views are required in the middle, and contracts where the service core is located. Horizontal grids draw the viewer’s eye across the façade and to the sky.
The towers include a coworking space managed by the Singapore Academy of Law, for attorneys and tech companies; a theatrette, business center, cafeteria, roof garden and sky terraces, and a library and auditorium located in the basement.
The complex’s smart building features include facial recognition and automated building management processes for security and MEP systems. Other IT or web-enabled services introduced include video-conferencing facilities and interactive self-service kiosks. A universal design approach was adopted to ensure that it is user-friendly to the judges, persons in custody, and the public, for example in providing Assistive Listening Systems for court attendees and in all its courtrooms, digital wayfinding through apps.
The State Courts Towers is an environmentally sustainable building, with green building features incorporated in its design, such as solar panels and condensate water recovery systems.
Open space, acoustics, user inclusion, visibility, and smart technology were important factors in the design of the courtrooms. Illustration: CPG Consultants; Image: Khoogj
Related Stories
Sponsored | Walls and Partitions | Mar 25, 2015
Metl-Span systems meet design needs in cost effective manner
The goal from the beginning was to construct an energy efficient building with insulated metal panels.
Sponsored | Cladding and Facade Systems | Mar 24, 2015
Designers turn a struggling mall into a hub of learning and recreation
Architects help Nashville government transform a struggling mall into a new community space.
Government Buildings | Mar 23, 2015
SOM leads planning for Egypt’s new $45 billion capital city
To alleviate overcrowding and congestion in Cairo, the Egyptian government is building a new capital from scratch.
Justice Facilities | Mar 5, 2015
New courthouse blossoms into a civic space for one California town
The building's canopy suggests classical courthouse features of front porch and portico. It also helps connect the building with a public plaza that has re-centered civic activity and public gathering for the town.
Justice Facilities | Mar 5, 2015
State of the state: How state governments are funding construction projects
State budget shortfalls are making new construction and renovation projects a tough sell, leading lawmakers to seek alternative funding for these jobs.
High-rise Construction | Mar 4, 2015
Must see: Egypt planning 656-foot pyramid skyscraper in Cairo
Zayed Crystal Spark Tower will stand 200 meters tall and will be just a short distance from the pyramids of Giza.
| Jan 6, 2015
Snøhetta unveils design proposal of the Barack Obama Presidential Center Library for the University of Hawaii
The plan by Snøhetta and WCIT Architecture features a building that appears square from the outside, but opens at one corner into a rounded courtyard with a pool, Dezeen reports.
| Jan 2, 2015
Construction put in place enjoyed healthy gains in 2014
Construction consultant FMI foresees—with some caveats—continuing growth in the office, lodging, and manufacturing sectors. But funding uncertainties raise red flags in education and healthcare.
| Dec 29, 2014
HealthSpot station merges personalized healthcare with videoconferencing [BD+C's 2014 Great Solutions Report]
The HealthSpot station is an 8x5-foot, ADA-compliant mobile kiosk that lets patients access a network of board-certified physicians through interactive videoconferencing and medical devices. It was named a 2014 Great Solution by the editors of Building Design+Construction.
| Dec 28, 2014
Robots, drones, and printed buildings: The promise of automated construction
Building Teams across the globe are employing advanced robotics to simplify what is inherently a complex, messy process—construction.