BIG and Ramboll masterplan “urban mosaic” of islands in Penang
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Case Studies
A team of Danish and Malaysian consultants has won a competition to design a series of developments on three artificial islands in the Malaccan strait.
Architect Bjarke Ingels Group and consulting engineer Ramboll have joined with Kuala Lumpur designer Hijjas Kasturi Associates to masterplan the 1,800ha BiodiverCity venture on the islands.
The project will consist of villages of around 16,000 residents located along 25km of waterfront, 4.6km of public beaches and 240ha of parks.
The homes will be built from low-carbon materials such as bamboo and Malaysian timber, as well as sustainable concrete made from industrial waste and recycled materials. Energy will come from solar panels and wind turbines.
Green facades and roofs will be used to create the sense of a “continuous habitat mosaic” that will allows houses to blend into the islands’ forests and beaches.
The three main elements will be:
- The Channels: This will be the first island to be dredged up. It will host a technology park, research institutions and a cultural hub.
- The Mangroves: BiodiverCity’s central island will be arranged around a network of urban wetlands, with a tower called the Bamboo Beacon for meetings, conferences and events.
- The Laguna: This will actually be eight small islands of floating, stilted and terraced housing based around a marina.
The project is aiming to become car-free, with autonomous public transport vehicles operating in the air, water and on land. Ecological corridors will be built for animals to allow them to navigate areas occupied by humans.
The project is being overseen by the state government of Penang, which has not given it a start date.
Images courtesy of BIG
Taxonomy
- Smart City
- Resilient City