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Park system planning products respond to National policies and result in structural urban elements and a range of park types. Global (western ideology) and local issues have influenced park system planning and the physical design of individual parks over time. However, in Singapore the eastern literature has not addressed the development of parks and urban green spaces in terms of historical perspective. This book traces the evolution of Singapore's parks system, from late Colonial period to the present. Further, it contextualizes the design and planning of parks in the general discourse on…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Park system planning products respond to National policies and result in structural urban elements and a range of park types.
Global (western ideology) and local issues have influenced park system planning and the physical design of individual parks over time. However, in Singapore the eastern literature has not addressed the development of parks and urban green spaces in terms of historical perspective.
This book traces the evolution of Singapore's parks system, from late Colonial period to the present. Further, it contextualizes the design and planning of parks in the general discourse on western and eastern traditions: early 20th-century western conceptions 'imported' during Colonialism; Modernism; Postmodernism, and the contemporary Ecological debate. The publication reveals the interrelations between visual representations and changing political ideologies. Singapore's system of public parks is shown to represent an iconography created by the state, one meant to deliver a certain message, and to evoke a certain attitude and lifestyle. Its set of constructed narratives elucidates on the potential social and cultural roles of public parks. However, Singapore's park system presents a novel paradigm for expanding Asian cities, characterized by evolving and ephemeral urban imaging strategies.
In framing Singapore's case study within the broader perspective of eastern applications of western planning and design practices, and constructions of nation in post-Colonial countries, the manuscript establishes the contribution of the Singaporean model of design and planning of parks to the international debate.
Autorenporträt
Dr. Raffaella Sini is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Landscape Architecture, in the College of Art and Architecture of the University of Idaho. She has held positions at various universities around the world, including five years as Assistant Professor in the Department of Architecture of the National University of Singapore. Her primary research interests are in the areas of designing contemporary landscape architectures and cultural landscapes.