Jason Pomeroy's book launch of ‘The Skycourt and Skygarden: Greening the Urban Habitat’

Posted on Tue, 2013-10-22 02:16 by Rosie M.

The incorporation of skycourts and skygardens into developments are no longer a gimmick or trend, but a quintessential element within the urban vocabulary of the 21st century city, according to Jason Pomeroy, Founding Principal of award-winning sustainable design practice, Pomeroy Studio.  Over 100 guests gathered on the sky terrace at the Park Royal hotel, Singapore, for an evening hosted by Esquire magazine and Heineken to celebrate the launch of his new book, ‘The Skycourt and Skygarden: Greening the Urban Habitat’.

Pomeroy, who was one of the featured ‘Heineken Ministry of Mavens’ in the August issue of Esquire, is one of the world’s leading authorities on skycourts and skygardens, and has for the past 10 years researched the social, spatial, economic, environmental, cultural and technological attributes of such sky-rise social spaces around the world.  His latest book, with a foreward by eco-architect Ken Yeang, and published by leading academic publishing house, Routledge, brings together his research into one concise volume, due for global release in October.

At the event, Pomeroy lucidly presented how such vertical landscaped social spaces have been incorporated into cities as a consequence of inner city migration, urbanization, and depletion of open public spaces.  Ambient temperature reduction (and thus a reduction in energy consumption), income generation through fee levying of skygarden observation desks, and enhanced productivity of the workforce given the presence of space and urban greenery, are just some of the benefits of incorporating such social spaces.  In addition, he explained how they help reduce perceived densities of high-density urban habitat, and provide a means to replenish the loss of open space as a consequence of urbanization.

Referencing historical and contemporary precedents that range from the hanging gardens of Babylon to the National Library Singapore, he provided insights into his book that investigates how skycourts and skygardens have become the new accepted urban social spaces of our time.  Using graphics and full colour images throughout, Pomeroy explores 40 current and forthcoming skycourt and skygarden projects from around the world, including the Shard (London), Marina Bay Sands (Singapore), the Shanghai Tower (China) and the Lotte Tower (South Korea), and draws conclusive ‘prompts for thinking’ for the future design.

Pomeroy has gleaned considerable interest from not just the private sector of property developers looking to increase their selling prices, given the economic benefits of incorporating such recreational landscape spaces in the sky, but also been courted by leading government agencies looking to consider their incorporation as planning guidelines, from around the world.

Source: Jason Pomeroy's 'Skycourts and Skygarden' Book Launch Event