Skip to main content
Article

Saving Pearl Bank Apartments

Topics

Places and Buildings

10 October 2016

Architectural conservation or real estate investment? Justin Zhuang ponders over the fate of a 1970s style icon that has seen better times.

A dramatic view from a penthouse on the 38th floor of Pearl Bank apartments. This iconic block, completed in 1976, was the tallest apartment building in Singapore at the time. Photo by Justin Zhuang.

A dramatic view from a penthouse on the 38th floor of Pearl Bank apartments. This iconic block, completed in 1976, was the tallest apartment building in Singapore at the time. Photo by Justin Zhuang.

Tan Cheng Siong, the original architect of Pearl Bank, has come up with a conservation plan that entails demolishing part of the existing five-storey carpark and building a new block of 150 apartments. Courtesy of Archurban Architects Planners. Like what you're reading? Subscribe to BiblioAsia's online newsletter for the latest stories.

Tan Cheng Siong, the original architect of Pearl Bank, has come up with a conservation plan that entails demolishing part of the existing five-storey carpark and building a new block of 150 apartments. Courtesy of Archurban Architects Planners. Like what you're reading? Subscribe to BiblioAsia's online newsletter for the latest stories.

Rise of an Architectural Icon

Artist’s impression of a show flat when Pearl Bank was first marketed in the early 1970s. Courtesy of pearlbankapartments.com.

Artist’s impression of a show flat when Pearl Bank was first marketed in the early 1970s. Courtesy of pearlbankapartments.com.

A sectional perspective of a typical split-level apartment unit in a 1972 sales brochure. Courtesy of pearlbankapartments.com.

A sectional perspective of a typical split-level apartment unit in a 1972 sales brochure. Courtesy of pearlbankapartments.com.

When Architecture Becomes Property

Pearl Bank was advertised as the “tallest apartment block in Southeast Asia” in the April 1976 issue of Building Materials & Equipment Southeast Asia magazine. On sale were penthouses as well as 2-, 3- and 4-bedroom apartments.

Pearl Bank was advertised as the “tallest apartment block in Southeast Asia” in the April 1976 issue of Building Materials & Equipment Southeast Asia magazine. On sale were penthouses as well as 2-, 3- and 4-bedroom apartments.

Architect Tan Cheng Siong sketched this new tower in 1980 when he was thinking of ways to save Pearl Bank. Courtesy of pearlbankapartments.com.

Architect Tan Cheng Siong sketched this new tower in 1980 when he was thinking of ways to save Pearl Bank. Courtesy of pearlbankapartments.com.

Conservation and Conversations

(Left) A rendering of what Pearl Bank would look like if the current conservation plan goes through. It involves demolishing part of the existing five-storey carpark and building a new block of 150 apartments. Courtesy of Archurban Architects Planners. (Right) The rooftop garden of the new apartment block would connect to Pearl Bank’s existing 28th floor where the communal facilities for residents are located. Courtesy of Archurban Architects Planners.

(Left) A rendering of what Pearl Bank would look like if the current conservation plan goes through. It involves demolishing part of the existing five-storey carpark and building a new block of 150 apartments. Courtesy of Archurban Architects Planners. (Right) The rooftop garden of the new apartment block would connect to Pearl Bank’s existing 28th floor where the communal facilities for residents are located. Courtesy of Archurban Architects Planners.

Endnotes
Back to top