At the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Lake Edge is a gated residential neighbourhood within a 58 acre land that borders a lake. Recognising the need for better urban homes, the idea is to develop a planning programme that not only provide houses but a proper living environment where one may call a home.
Taking design cues from the lake, the concept incorporates the garden into the planning with linear parks and green strips between housing rows that connect to an esplanade at the edge of the lake. Curvilinear roads and paved pedestrian walkways complete the park-like concept. A guardhouse stands vigilant at the main entrance of the neighbourhood and with the perimeter of the whole development secured, the individual houses make do without fences, in turn encouraging interaction and nurturing a close-knit, neighbourly community.
An entrance boulevard that acts as the garden spine ‘opens up’ and expands the neighbourhood. Driving down the boulevard from the guardhouse, different views present themselves from ‘pockets’ of open spaces created by the linear parks and green strips. This progression of parks then terminates at the lake esplanade with the wide open spaces of the lake. This sequential experience would also repeat itself in the design of the individual houses in the manner which the gardens are brought into the houses.
Access roads to the residential units are curvilinear and meander that softens the repetitive Cartesian forms of the housing units and complements the garden concept. The roads are paved at its junctions and bends that then ends in cul-de-sacs. This road concept allows each neighborhood road spine to be safer and to be utilised by the residents that results in a closer knit neighbourhood.
To promote the continuity of the neighbourhood and its parks, paved pedestrian walkways run in front of the residential units throughout the whole development. This concept is carried through to the backlanes, where they are articulated as a garden with pedestrian walkways and sitting places that connects each home with the greater park and the neighbourhood.
CNBC, Asia Pacific Property Award 2009 Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI d”Excellence Awards 2009 1st Runnerup Master Plan Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI Malaysia Property Award 2009 Residential Development (Low Rise) Lake Edge, Puchong | |
PAM Awards 2009 Mention – Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong |
At the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Lake Edge is a gated residential neighbourhood within a 58 acre land that borders a lake. Recognising the need for better urban homes, the idea is to develop a planning programme that not only provide houses but a proper living environment where one may call a home.
Taking design cues from the lake, the concept incorporates the garden into the planning with linear parks and green strips between housing rows that connect to an esplanade at the edge of the lake. Curvilinear roads and paved pedestrian walkways complete the park-like concept. A guardhouse stands vigilant at the main entrance of the neighbourhood and with the perimeter of the whole development secured, the individual houses make do without fences, in turn encouraging interaction and nurturing a close-knit, neighbourly community.
An entrance boulevard that acts as the garden spine ‘opens up’ and expands the neighbourhood. Driving down the boulevard from the guardhouse, different views present themselves from ‘pockets’ of open spaces created by the linear parks and green strips. This progression of parks then terminates at the lake esplanade with the wide open spaces of the lake. This sequential experience would also repeat itself in the design of the individual houses in the manner which the gardens are brought into the houses.
Access roads to the residential units are curvilinear and meander that softens the repetitive Cartesian forms of the housing units and complements the garden concept. The roads are paved at its junctions and bends that then ends in cul-de-sacs. This road concept allows each neighborhood road spine to be safer and to be utilised by the residents that results in a closer knit neighbourhood.
To promote the continuity of the neighbourhood and its parks, paved pedestrian walkways run in front of the residential units throughout the whole development. This concept is carried through to the backlanes, where they are articulated as a garden with pedestrian walkways and sitting places that connects each home with the greater park and the neighbourhood.
CNBC, Asia Pacific Property Award 2009 Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI d”Excellence Awards 2009 1st Runnerup Master Plan Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI Malaysia Property Award 2009 Residential Development (Low Rise) Lake Edge, Puchong | |
PAM Awards 2009 Mention – Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong |
At the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Lake Edge is a gated residential neighbourhood within a 58 acre land that borders a lake. Recognising the need for better urban homes, the idea is to develop a planning programme that not only provide houses but a proper living environment where one may call a home.
Taking design cues from the lake, the concept incorporates the garden into the planning with linear parks and green strips between housing rows that connect to an esplanade at the edge of the lake. Curvilinear roads and paved pedestrian walkways complete the park-like concept. A guardhouse stands vigilant at the main entrance of the neighbourhood and with the perimeter of the whole development secured, the individual houses make do without fences, in turn encouraging interaction and nurturing a close-knit, neighbourly community.
An entrance boulevard that acts as the garden spine ‘opens up’ and expands the neighbourhood. Driving down the boulevard from the guardhouse, different views present themselves from ‘pockets’ of open spaces created by the linear parks and green strips. This progression of parks then terminates at the lake esplanade with the wide open spaces of the lake. This sequential experience would also repeat itself in the design of the individual houses in the manner which the gardens are brought into the houses.
Access roads to the residential units are curvilinear and meander that softens the repetitive Cartesian forms of the housing units and complements the garden concept. The roads are paved at its junctions and bends that then ends in cul-de-sacs. This road concept allows each neighborhood road spine to be safer and to be utilised by the residents that results in a closer knit neighbourhood.
To promote the continuity of the neighbourhood and its parks, paved pedestrian walkways run in front of the residential units throughout the whole development. This concept is carried through to the backlanes, where they are articulated as a garden with pedestrian walkways and sitting places that connects each home with the greater park and the neighbourhood.
CNBC, Asia Pacific Property Award 2009 Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI d”Excellence Awards 2009 1st Runnerup Master Plan Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI Malaysia Property Award 2009 Residential Development (Low Rise) Lake Edge, Puchong | |
PAM Awards 2009 Mention – Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong |
At the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Lake Edge is a gated residential neighbourhood within a 58 acre land that borders a lake. Recognising the need for better urban homes, the idea is to develop a planning programme that not only provide houses but a proper living environment where one may call a home.
Taking design cues from the lake, the concept incorporates the garden into the planning with linear parks and green strips between housing rows that connect to an esplanade at the edge of the lake. Curvilinear roads and paved pedestrian walkways complete the park-like concept. A guardhouse stands vigilant at the main entrance of the neighbourhood and with the perimeter of the whole development secured, the individual houses make do without fences, in turn encouraging interaction and nurturing a close-knit, neighbourly community.
An entrance boulevard that acts as the garden spine ‘opens up’ and expands the neighbourhood. Driving down the boulevard from the guardhouse, different views present themselves from ‘pockets’ of open spaces created by the linear parks and green strips. This progression of parks then terminates at the lake esplanade with the wide open spaces of the lake. This sequential experience would also repeat itself in the design of the individual houses in the manner which the gardens are brought into the houses.
Access roads to the residential units are curvilinear and meander that softens the repetitive Cartesian forms of the housing units and complements the garden concept. The roads are paved at its junctions and bends that then ends in cul-de-sacs. This road concept allows each neighborhood road spine to be safer and to be utilised by the residents that results in a closer knit neighbourhood.
To promote the continuity of the neighbourhood and its parks, paved pedestrian walkways run in front of the residential units throughout the whole development. This concept is carried through to the backlanes, where they are articulated as a garden with pedestrian walkways and sitting places that connects each home with the greater park and the neighbourhood.
CNBC, Asia Pacific Property Award 2009 Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI d”Excellence Awards 2009 1st Runnerup Master Plan Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI Malaysia Property Award 2009 Residential Development (Low Rise) Lake Edge, Puchong | |
PAM Awards 2009 Mention – Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong |
At the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Lake Edge is a gated residential neighbourhood within a 58 acre land that borders a lake. Recognising the need for better urban homes, the idea is to develop a planning programme that not only provide houses but a proper living environment where one may call a home.
Taking design cues from the lake, the concept incorporates the garden into the planning with linear parks and green strips between housing rows that connect to an esplanade at the edge of the lake. Curvilinear roads and paved pedestrian walkways complete the park-like concept. A guardhouse stands vigilant at the main entrance of the neighbourhood and with the perimeter of the whole development secured, the individual houses make do without fences, in turn encouraging interaction and nurturing a close-knit, neighbourly community.
An entrance boulevard that acts as the garden spine ‘opens up’ and expands the neighbourhood. Driving down the boulevard from the guardhouse, different views present themselves from ‘pockets’ of open spaces created by the linear parks and green strips. This progression of parks then terminates at the lake esplanade with the wide open spaces of the lake. This sequential experience would also repeat itself in the design of the individual houses in the manner which the gardens are brought into the houses.
Access roads to the residential units are curvilinear and meander that softens the repetitive Cartesian forms of the housing units and complements the garden concept. The roads are paved at its junctions and bends that then ends in cul-de-sacs. This road concept allows each neighborhood road spine to be safer and to be utilised by the residents that results in a closer knit neighbourhood.
To promote the continuity of the neighbourhood and its parks, paved pedestrian walkways run in front of the residential units throughout the whole development. This concept is carried through to the backlanes, where they are articulated as a garden with pedestrian walkways and sitting places that connects each home with the greater park and the neighbourhood.
CNBC, Asia Pacific Property Award 2009 Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI d”Excellence Awards 2009 1st Runnerup Master Plan Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI Malaysia Property Award 2009 Residential Development (Low Rise) Lake Edge, Puchong | |
PAM Awards 2009 Mention – Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong |
At the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Lake Edge is a gated residential neighbourhood within a 58 acre land that borders a lake. Recognising the need for better urban homes, the idea is to develop a planning programme that not only provide houses but a proper living environment where one may call a home.
Taking design cues from the lake, the concept incorporates the garden into the planning with linear parks and green strips between housing rows that connect to an esplanade at the edge of the lake. Curvilinear roads and paved pedestrian walkways complete the park-like concept. A guardhouse stands vigilant at the main entrance of the neighbourhood and with the perimeter of the whole development secured, the individual houses make do without fences, in turn encouraging interaction and nurturing a close-knit, neighbourly community.
An entrance boulevard that acts as the garden spine ‘opens up’ and expands the neighbourhood. Driving down the boulevard from the guardhouse, different views present themselves from ‘pockets’ of open spaces created by the linear parks and green strips. This progression of parks then terminates at the lake esplanade with the wide open spaces of the lake. This sequential experience would also repeat itself in the design of the individual houses in the manner which the gardens are brought into the houses.
Access roads to the residential units are curvilinear and meander that softens the repetitive Cartesian forms of the housing units and complements the garden concept. The roads are paved at its junctions and bends that then ends in cul-de-sacs. This road concept allows each neighborhood road spine to be safer and to be utilised by the residents that results in a closer knit neighbourhood.
To promote the continuity of the neighbourhood and its parks, paved pedestrian walkways run in front of the residential units throughout the whole development. This concept is carried through to the backlanes, where they are articulated as a garden with pedestrian walkways and sitting places that connects each home with the greater park and the neighbourhood.
CNBC, Asia Pacific Property Award 2009 Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI d”Excellence Awards 2009 1st Runnerup Master Plan Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI Malaysia Property Award 2009 Residential Development (Low Rise) Lake Edge, Puchong | |
PAM Awards 2009 Mention – Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong |
At the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Lake Edge is a gated residential neighbourhood within a 58 acre land that borders a lake. Recognising the need for better urban homes, the idea is to develop a planning programme that not only provide houses but a proper living environment where one may call a home.
Taking design cues from the lake, the concept incorporates the garden into the planning with linear parks and green strips between housing rows that connect to an esplanade at the edge of the lake. Curvilinear roads and paved pedestrian walkways complete the park-like concept. A guardhouse stands vigilant at the main entrance of the neighbourhood and with the perimeter of the whole development secured, the individual houses make do without fences, in turn encouraging interaction and nurturing a close-knit, neighbourly community.
An entrance boulevard that acts as the garden spine ‘opens up’ and expands the neighbourhood. Driving down the boulevard from the guardhouse, different views present themselves from ‘pockets’ of open spaces created by the linear parks and green strips. This progression of parks then terminates at the lake esplanade with the wide open spaces of the lake. This sequential experience would also repeat itself in the design of the individual houses in the manner which the gardens are brought into the houses.
Access roads to the residential units are curvilinear and meander that softens the repetitive Cartesian forms of the housing units and complements the garden concept. The roads are paved at its junctions and bends that then ends in cul-de-sacs. This road concept allows each neighborhood road spine to be safer and to be utilised by the residents that results in a closer knit neighbourhood.
To promote the continuity of the neighbourhood and its parks, paved pedestrian walkways run in front of the residential units throughout the whole development. This concept is carried through to the backlanes, where they are articulated as a garden with pedestrian walkways and sitting places that connects each home with the greater park and the neighbourhood.
CNBC, Asia Pacific Property Award 2009 Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI d”Excellence Awards 2009 1st Runnerup Master Plan Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI Malaysia Property Award 2009 Residential Development (Low Rise) Lake Edge, Puchong | |
PAM Awards 2009 Mention – Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong |
At the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Lake Edge is a gated residential neighbourhood within a 58 acre land that borders a lake. Recognising the need for better urban homes, the idea is to develop a planning programme that not only provide houses but a proper living environment where one may call a home.
Taking design cues from the lake, the concept incorporates the garden into the planning with linear parks and green strips between housing rows that connect to an esplanade at the edge of the lake. Curvilinear roads and paved pedestrian walkways complete the park-like concept. A guardhouse stands vigilant at the main entrance of the neighbourhood and with the perimeter of the whole development secured, the individual houses make do without fences, in turn encouraging interaction and nurturing a close-knit, neighbourly community.
An entrance boulevard that acts as the garden spine ‘opens up’ and expands the neighbourhood. Driving down the boulevard from the guardhouse, different views present themselves from ‘pockets’ of open spaces created by the linear parks and green strips. This progression of parks then terminates at the lake esplanade with the wide open spaces of the lake. This sequential experience would also repeat itself in the design of the individual houses in the manner which the gardens are brought into the houses.
Access roads to the residential units are curvilinear and meander that softens the repetitive Cartesian forms of the housing units and complements the garden concept. The roads are paved at its junctions and bends that then ends in cul-de-sacs. This road concept allows each neighborhood road spine to be safer and to be utilised by the residents that results in a closer knit neighbourhood.
To promote the continuity of the neighbourhood and its parks, paved pedestrian walkways run in front of the residential units throughout the whole development. This concept is carried through to the backlanes, where they are articulated as a garden with pedestrian walkways and sitting places that connects each home with the greater park and the neighbourhood.
CNBC, Asia Pacific Property Award 2009 Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI d”Excellence Awards 2009 1st Runnerup Master Plan Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI Malaysia Property Award 2009 Residential Development (Low Rise) Lake Edge, Puchong | |
PAM Awards 2009 Mention – Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong |
At the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Lake Edge is a gated residential neighbourhood within a 58 acre land that borders a lake. Recognising the need for better urban homes, the idea is to develop a planning programme that not only provide houses but a proper living environment where one may call a home.
Taking design cues from the lake, the concept incorporates the garden into the planning with linear parks and green strips between housing rows that connect to an esplanade at the edge of the lake. Curvilinear roads and paved pedestrian walkways complete the park-like concept. A guardhouse stands vigilant at the main entrance of the neighbourhood and with the perimeter of the whole development secured, the individual houses make do without fences, in turn encouraging interaction and nurturing a close-knit, neighbourly community.
An entrance boulevard that acts as the garden spine ‘opens up’ and expands the neighbourhood. Driving down the boulevard from the guardhouse, different views present themselves from ‘pockets’ of open spaces created by the linear parks and green strips. This progression of parks then terminates at the lake esplanade with the wide open spaces of the lake. This sequential experience would also repeat itself in the design of the individual houses in the manner which the gardens are brought into the houses.
Access roads to the residential units are curvilinear and meander that softens the repetitive Cartesian forms of the housing units and complements the garden concept. The roads are paved at its junctions and bends that then ends in cul-de-sacs. This road concept allows each neighborhood road spine to be safer and to be utilised by the residents that results in a closer knit neighbourhood.
To promote the continuity of the neighbourhood and its parks, paved pedestrian walkways run in front of the residential units throughout the whole development. This concept is carried through to the backlanes, where they are articulated as a garden with pedestrian walkways and sitting places that connects each home with the greater park and the neighbourhood.
CNBC, Asia Pacific Property Award 2009 Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI d”Excellence Awards 2009 1st Runnerup Master Plan Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI Malaysia Property Award 2009 Residential Development (Low Rise) Lake Edge, Puchong | |
PAM Awards 2009 Mention – Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong |
At the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Lake Edge is a gated residential neighbourhood within a 58 acre land that borders a lake. Recognising the need for better urban homes, the idea is to develop a planning programme that not only provide houses but a proper living environment where one may call a home.
Taking design cues from the lake, the concept incorporates the garden into the planning with linear parks and green strips between housing rows that connect to an esplanade at the edge of the lake. Curvilinear roads and paved pedestrian walkways complete the park-like concept. A guardhouse stands vigilant at the main entrance of the neighbourhood and with the perimeter of the whole development secured, the individual houses make do without fences, in turn encouraging interaction and nurturing a close-knit, neighbourly community.
An entrance boulevard that acts as the garden spine ‘opens up’ and expands the neighbourhood. Driving down the boulevard from the guardhouse, different views present themselves from ‘pockets’ of open spaces created by the linear parks and green strips. This progression of parks then terminates at the lake esplanade with the wide open spaces of the lake. This sequential experience would also repeat itself in the design of the individual houses in the manner which the gardens are brought into the houses.
Access roads to the residential units are curvilinear and meander that softens the repetitive Cartesian forms of the housing units and complements the garden concept. The roads are paved at its junctions and bends that then ends in cul-de-sacs. This road concept allows each neighborhood road spine to be safer and to be utilised by the residents that results in a closer knit neighbourhood.
To promote the continuity of the neighbourhood and its parks, paved pedestrian walkways run in front of the residential units throughout the whole development. This concept is carried through to the backlanes, where they are articulated as a garden with pedestrian walkways and sitting places that connects each home with the greater park and the neighbourhood.
CNBC, Asia Pacific Property Award 2009 Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI d”Excellence Awards 2009 1st Runnerup Master Plan Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI Malaysia Property Award 2009 Residential Development (Low Rise) Lake Edge, Puchong | |
PAM Awards 2009 Mention – Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong |
At the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Lake Edge is a gated residential neighbourhood within a 58 acre land that borders a lake. Recognising the need for better urban homes, the idea is to develop a planning programme that not only provide houses but a proper living environment where one may call a home.
Taking design cues from the lake, the concept incorporates the garden into the planning with linear parks and green strips between housing rows that connect to an esplanade at the edge of the lake. Curvilinear roads and paved pedestrian walkways complete the park-like concept. A guardhouse stands vigilant at the main entrance of the neighbourhood and with the perimeter of the whole development secured, the individual houses make do without fences, in turn encouraging interaction and nurturing a close-knit, neighbourly community.
An entrance boulevard that acts as the garden spine ‘opens up’ and expands the neighbourhood. Driving down the boulevard from the guardhouse, different views present themselves from ‘pockets’ of open spaces created by the linear parks and green strips. This progression of parks then terminates at the lake esplanade with the wide open spaces of the lake. This sequential experience would also repeat itself in the design of the individual houses in the manner which the gardens are brought into the houses.
Access roads to the residential units are curvilinear and meander that softens the repetitive Cartesian forms of the housing units and complements the garden concept. The roads are paved at its junctions and bends that then ends in cul-de-sacs. This road concept allows each neighborhood road spine to be safer and to be utilised by the residents that results in a closer knit neighbourhood.
To promote the continuity of the neighbourhood and its parks, paved pedestrian walkways run in front of the residential units throughout the whole development. This concept is carried through to the backlanes, where they are articulated as a garden with pedestrian walkways and sitting places that connects each home with the greater park and the neighbourhood.
CNBC, Asia Pacific Property Award 2009 Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI d”Excellence Awards 2009 1st Runnerup Master Plan Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI Malaysia Property Award 2009 Residential Development (Low Rise) Lake Edge, Puchong | |
PAM Awards 2009 Mention – Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong |
At the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Lake Edge is a gated residential neighbourhood within a 58 acre land that borders a lake. Recognising the need for better urban homes, the idea is to develop a planning programme that not only provide houses but a proper living environment where one may call a home.
Taking design cues from the lake, the concept incorporates the garden into the planning with linear parks and green strips between housing rows that connect to an esplanade at the edge of the lake. Curvilinear roads and paved pedestrian walkways complete the park-like concept. A guardhouse stands vigilant at the main entrance of the neighbourhood and with the perimeter of the whole development secured, the individual houses make do without fences, in turn encouraging interaction and nurturing a close-knit, neighbourly community.
An entrance boulevard that acts as the garden spine ‘opens up’ and expands the neighbourhood. Driving down the boulevard from the guardhouse, different views present themselves from ‘pockets’ of open spaces created by the linear parks and green strips. This progression of parks then terminates at the lake esplanade with the wide open spaces of the lake. This sequential experience would also repeat itself in the design of the individual houses in the manner which the gardens are brought into the houses.
Access roads to the residential units are curvilinear and meander that softens the repetitive Cartesian forms of the housing units and complements the garden concept. The roads are paved at its junctions and bends that then ends in cul-de-sacs. This road concept allows each neighborhood road spine to be safer and to be utilised by the residents that results in a closer knit neighbourhood.
To promote the continuity of the neighbourhood and its parks, paved pedestrian walkways run in front of the residential units throughout the whole development. This concept is carried through to the backlanes, where they are articulated as a garden with pedestrian walkways and sitting places that connects each home with the greater park and the neighbourhood.
CNBC, Asia Pacific Property Award 2009 Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI d”Excellence Awards 2009 1st Runnerup Master Plan Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI Malaysia Property Award 2009 Residential Development (Low Rise) Lake Edge, Puchong | |
PAM Awards 2009 Mention – Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong |
At the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Lake Edge is a gated residential neighbourhood within a 58 acre land that borders a lake. Recognising the need for better urban homes, the idea is to develop a planning programme that not only provide houses but a proper living environment where one may call a home.
Taking design cues from the lake, the concept incorporates the garden into the planning with linear parks and green strips between housing rows that connect to an esplanade at the edge of the lake. Curvilinear roads and paved pedestrian walkways complete the park-like concept. A guardhouse stands vigilant at the main entrance of the neighbourhood and with the perimeter of the whole development secured, the individual houses make do without fences, in turn encouraging interaction and nurturing a close-knit, neighbourly community.
An entrance boulevard that acts as the garden spine ‘opens up’ and expands the neighbourhood. Driving down the boulevard from the guardhouse, different views present themselves from ‘pockets’ of open spaces created by the linear parks and green strips. This progression of parks then terminates at the lake esplanade with the wide open spaces of the lake. This sequential experience would also repeat itself in the design of the individual houses in the manner which the gardens are brought into the houses.
Access roads to the residential units are curvilinear and meander that softens the repetitive Cartesian forms of the housing units and complements the garden concept. The roads are paved at its junctions and bends that then ends in cul-de-sacs. This road concept allows each neighborhood road spine to be safer and to be utilised by the residents that results in a closer knit neighbourhood.
To promote the continuity of the neighbourhood and its parks, paved pedestrian walkways run in front of the residential units throughout the whole development. This concept is carried through to the backlanes, where they are articulated as a garden with pedestrian walkways and sitting places that connects each home with the greater park and the neighbourhood.
CNBC, Asia Pacific Property Award 2009 Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI d”Excellence Awards 2009 1st Runnerup Master Plan Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI Malaysia Property Award 2009 Residential Development (Low Rise) Lake Edge, Puchong | |
PAM Awards 2009 Mention – Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong |
At the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Lake Edge is a gated residential neighbourhood within a 58 acre land that borders a lake. Recognising the need for better urban homes, the idea is to develop a planning programme that not only provide houses but a proper living environment where one may call a home.
Taking design cues from the lake, the concept incorporates the garden into the planning with linear parks and green strips between housing rows that connect to an esplanade at the edge of the lake. Curvilinear roads and paved pedestrian walkways complete the park-like concept. A guardhouse stands vigilant at the main entrance of the neighbourhood and with the perimeter of the whole development secured, the individual houses make do without fences, in turn encouraging interaction and nurturing a close-knit, neighbourly community.
An entrance boulevard that acts as the garden spine ‘opens up’ and expands the neighbourhood. Driving down the boulevard from the guardhouse, different views present themselves from ‘pockets’ of open spaces created by the linear parks and green strips. This progression of parks then terminates at the lake esplanade with the wide open spaces of the lake. This sequential experience would also repeat itself in the design of the individual houses in the manner which the gardens are brought into the houses.
Access roads to the residential units are curvilinear and meander that softens the repetitive Cartesian forms of the housing units and complements the garden concept. The roads are paved at its junctions and bends that then ends in cul-de-sacs. This road concept allows each neighborhood road spine to be safer and to be utilised by the residents that results in a closer knit neighbourhood.
To promote the continuity of the neighbourhood and its parks, paved pedestrian walkways run in front of the residential units throughout the whole development. This concept is carried through to the backlanes, where they are articulated as a garden with pedestrian walkways and sitting places that connects each home with the greater park and the neighbourhood.
CNBC, Asia Pacific Property Award 2009 Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI d”Excellence Awards 2009 1st Runnerup Master Plan Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI Malaysia Property Award 2009 Residential Development (Low Rise) Lake Edge, Puchong | |
PAM Awards 2009 Mention – Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong |
At the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur, Lake Edge is a gated residential neighbourhood within a 58 acre land that borders a lake. Recognising the need for better urban homes, the idea is to develop a planning programme that not only provide houses but a proper living environment where one may call a home.
Taking design cues from the lake, the concept incorporates the garden into the planning with linear parks and green strips between housing rows that connect to an esplanade at the edge of the lake. Curvilinear roads and paved pedestrian walkways complete the park-like concept. A guardhouse stands vigilant at the main entrance of the neighbourhood and with the perimeter of the whole development secured, the individual houses make do without fences, in turn encouraging interaction and nurturing a close-knit, neighbourly community.
An entrance boulevard that acts as the garden spine ‘opens up’ and expands the neighbourhood. Driving down the boulevard from the guardhouse, different views present themselves from ‘pockets’ of open spaces created by the linear parks and green strips. This progression of parks then terminates at the lake esplanade with the wide open spaces of the lake. This sequential experience would also repeat itself in the design of the individual houses in the manner which the gardens are brought into the houses.
Access roads to the residential units are curvilinear and meander that softens the repetitive Cartesian forms of the housing units and complements the garden concept. The roads are paved at its junctions and bends that then ends in cul-de-sacs. This road concept allows each neighborhood road spine to be safer and to be utilised by the residents that results in a closer knit neighbourhood.
To promote the continuity of the neighbourhood and its parks, paved pedestrian walkways run in front of the residential units throughout the whole development. This concept is carried through to the backlanes, where they are articulated as a garden with pedestrian walkways and sitting places that connects each home with the greater park and the neighbourhood.
CNBC, Asia Pacific Property Award 2009 Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI d”Excellence Awards 2009 1st Runnerup Master Plan Lake Edge, Puchong | |
FIABCI Malaysia Property Award 2009 Residential Development (Low Rise) Lake Edge, Puchong | |
PAM Awards 2009 Mention – Repetitive Residential Building Lake Edge, Puchong |