Construction Boom in Singapore of Asia

Concept, photos, videos, examples, construction



Free video about housing bubble. This free video was created for you by http://epsos.de and can be used for free under the creative commons license with the attribution of epSos.de as the original author of this housing bubble video. Thank you for supporting the creative commons movement !! For overall housing bubble known progress in most industrialized countries Westerners, the prices of real estate far above those of other goods and services, embodied in two waves or pulses during the two decades from mid-80s of XX century until midway through the first decade of the twenty-first century, with the consequent generation gap this creates a commodity to involve compulsory consumption such as housing. The housing bubble started within the housing market itself, not only for reasons of an economic nature, being fed upward, in a second stage, abundant mortgage favored expansionary monetary policies. Final maturation of the housing bubble begins after the bursting of the burbuja.com, in the late 90s, and the subsequent drop in interest rates agreed to fight their recessive effects; monetary laxity intensified after attacks September 11, 2001 and the war in Iraq, on the one hand and on the other, the culmination of the process of European monetary unification. The architecture of Singapore presents a wide range of influences and styles from different places and periods. They range from eclectic style and hybrid forms of the colonial period to the trends of contemporary architecture incorporating modern elements from around the world. In both its aesthetic and technological aspects, the architecture of Singapore can be divided into a pre-colonial period, more traditional Second World War, mainly modern and period after the war and post-colonial period. The traditional architecture of Singapore includes vernacular Malay houses hybrid local businesses and cottage black and white bungalows, a spectrum of places to pray that reflect the ethnic and religious diversity of the city-state as civic and commercial colonial architecture in European styles neoclassical, Gothic, Palladian and Renaissance. Modern Architecture in Singapore begins with the transitional style Art Deco and the arrival of reinforced concrete as a building material preferred. The modern style of architecture internationally was popular between 1950 to 1970, especially in the residential public housing. The style of architecture Brutalist was popular in the 1970s these styles coincided with periods of high urban renewal and building boom in the history of Singapore, and therefore these are very common architectural styles seen on the island. Among the most significant architectural works of this period are the Pearl Bank Apartments by Tan Cheng Siong, and People's Park Complex and Golden Mile Complex Design Partnership. Experiments of postmodern architecture in both the 'historicist' modes and deconstructivist made ​​their appearance in the 1980s, but the style was something off about his face. Another architectural trend was the rediscovery of the architectural heritage of Singapore, which led to an active conservation program as well as a thriving industry for restoring historic buildings, often adapting them to new uses. A recent example is the National Museum of Singapore. An important area of local innovation has been the attempt to develop a form suitable for the tropical climate of Singapore modern architecture. This processing architecture can be traced back to its origins in the vernacular Malay houses and experiments of colonial British architects and architects early nationalists to define an authentic local architecture using modern construction methods. In the 1980s and especially in the late 1990s, this led to a proliferation of what might be called 'modern tropical' architecture, or neoclassical architecture. It comprises a return to clean and simple rectilinear modernist forms, coupled with an emphasis on lush landscaping and delicate shade systems blinds with wood or metal instead of walls modernists of glass that absorb solar heat and capture. These architectural efforts have taken on new relevance and urgency because of concerns about global warming, the climate change and sustainable environment, especially since the air conditioning in one of the largest electricity consumption in Singapore, with the electricity produced primarily by the use of fossil fuels. Singapore has a market economy highly developed and successful. Your business environment is free, corruption is low, prices are stable and income per capita is higher than in many developed countries. Despite the existence of a processing industry rubber, tin and oil, in 1960 Singapore was still a sparsely industrialized and highly dependent on its role as a commercial port economy. Thank you for supporting the creative commons movement !!

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