Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/223740
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dc.titleTHE BROWN CO-OP: NEGOTIATING THE ABSENCE PRESENCE OF BUKIT BROWN
dc.contributor.authorTAN JING XIANG
dc.date.accessioned2015-08-06T07:12:45Z
dc.date.accessioned2022-04-22T20:40:58Z
dc.date.available2019-09-26T14:14:12Z
dc.date.available2022-04-22T20:40:58Z
dc.date.issued2015-08-06
dc.identifier.citationTAN JING XIANG (2015-08-06). THE BROWN CO-OP: NEGOTIATING THE ABSENCE PRESENCE OF BUKIT BROWN. ScholarBank@NUS Repository.
dc.identifier.urihttps://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/223740
dc.description.abstractThe thesis is about a duality, in which economic progress is “haunted” by the past it displaced. It investigates through architecture the phenom- ena of “haunting,” the activation of memory and formation of identity. Informing this investiga- tion are Freud’s psychoanalytic theories on the uncanny, the repressed, the pleasure principle; Anthony Vidler’s anthology on the architectural uncanny. In 2011, the state announced plans to redevelop the cemetery into a residential estate — a deci- sion that is contested by civil society groups, who see the site as one rich in biodiversity and histories of Singapore’s pre-independent nation builders. Anchored to the development of Bukit Brown Cemetery, the thesis seeks to recast this contestation beyond the polemics of progress and conservation, revealing that it also express- es an existential anxiety over national identity and individual’s connection to the past. Premised on the inevitable ‘need to develop,’ the thesis is positioned in a future where the cemetery ground has been razed, exhumed, and that its ancestral spirits has been ‘exorcised’ — paving a new land ready for development. Lo- cated at the edge of a park, this thesis seeks to reconnect the otherwise tabula rasa estate with memories of Bukit Brown by teasing out re- sidual traces of its cultural significance through a community-managed cooperation that profits from the earth from Bukit Brown itself. The sepulchral ground of Bukit Brown — the pregnant earth, which housed the bodies of Sin- gapore’s unsung pioneers, is in itself a kind of monument. Yet, for every housing development that takes place on Bukit Brown, quantities of earth have to be excavated and displaced to a dumpsite. The Brown Coop, however, proposes to take back the displaced earth so as to ex- tract from it: clay, sand and granite rocks. These raw materials will be used to produce mortar, bricks and pottery for the physical development of the coop. A dragon kiln and an industrial will sit within this site breathing new forms to the earth. Once every four months, a festival will be held to awaken the dragon kiln where timber is burned to stoke the furnace and people come together. Like Bukit Brown Cemetery where ground car- ries important Feng Shui values, notions of ground is renegotiated and new relationships are borne at the Brown Coop. The Brown Coop is a celebration of ground as source/origins with clay as the heart of the development, clay as a conduit of memory. The project is a critique of Singapore’s incessant need to develop, erasing the memory housed within the cemetery, yet as Freud pointed out, memory is never truly erased, merely sup- pressed, and like the memory of a place, trac- es of the suppressed can be teased out—what ought to have remained hidden could come to light.
dc.language.isoen
dc.sourcehttps://lib.sde.nus.edu.sg/dspace/handle/sde/3216
dc.subjectArchitecture
dc.subjectDesign Track
dc.subjectDT
dc.subjectMaster (Architecture)
dc.subjectTsuto Sakamoto
dc.subject2014/2015 Aki DT
dc.subjectAbsence
dc.subjectBukit Brown
dc.subjectClay
dc.subjectMemory
dc.subjectPresence
dc.subjectUncanny
dc.typeThesis
dc.contributor.departmentARCHITECTURE
dc.contributor.supervisorTSUTO SAKAMOTO
dc.description.degreeMaster's
dc.description.degreeconferredMASTER OF ARCHITECTURE (M.ARCH)
dc.embargo.terms2015-08-09
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