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BOTANIC URBANISM: The Technopolitics of Controlled Environments in Singapore's Gardens by the Bay
This article examines the development of Singapore's Gardens by the Bay, a parkland and botanical gardens complex on a reclaimed land platform which opened in 2012. It provides three readings of the development based on different types of technopolitical governance. First, it discusses the sign...
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Published in: | International journal of urban and regional research 2022-03, Vol.46 (2), p.220-234 |
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container_title | International journal of urban and regional research |
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description | This article examines the development of Singapore's Gardens by the Bay, a parkland and botanical gardens complex on a reclaimed land platform which opened in 2012. It provides three readings of the development based on different types of technopolitical governance. First, it discusses the significance of the location of the Gardens on one of Singapore's reclaimed land platforms, part of the ‘terraforming’ strategies of the government's land development process. Second, it situates the project within the state's complex botanical relationship with colonial and postcolonial knowledge circuits, and suggests that this is part of the governance challenge of ‘acclimatizing’ to the tropical climate. Third, it suggests that the Gardens are part of an ‘exhibitionary complex’ based on engaging publics with the state's ability to harness science to provide a controlled, ordered polity. To illustrate this, the article brings together the political discourse of two Singaporean prime ministers with a discussion of the architectural design and environmental engineering of the project, and the curatorial practices of the state's National Parks Board. The article demonstrates the complex interplay of environmental, architectural and botanical engineering with state strategies of both citizen engagement and tourist attraction, and the importance of the practice of exhibition within urban megaprojects. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1111/1468-2427.13075 |
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The article demonstrates the complex interplay of environmental, architectural and botanical engineering with state strategies of both citizen engagement and tourist attraction, and the importance of the practice of exhibition within urban megaprojects.</description><subject>Acclimatization</subject><subject>architecture</subject><subject>Botanical gardens</subject><subject>Building engineers</subject><subject>Circuits</subject><subject>Citizen participation</subject><subject>Colonialism</subject><subject>Discourse</subject><subject>Engineering</subject><subject>Environmental engineering</subject><subject>Gardens & gardening</subject><subject>Governance</subject><subject>green urbanism</subject><subject>Land</subject><subject>Land development</subject><subject>Land reclamation</subject><subject>National parks</subject><subject>Parks & recreation areas</subject><subject>Political discourse</subject><subject>Politics</subject><subject>Postcolonialism</subject><subject>Prime 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source | International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Wiley-Blackwell Read & Publish Collection; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts |
subjects | Acclimatization architecture Botanical gardens Building engineers Circuits Citizen participation Colonialism Discourse Engineering Environmental engineering Gardens & gardening Governance green urbanism Land Land development Land reclamation National parks Parks & recreation areas Political discourse Politics Postcolonialism Prime ministers Reclaimed land Singapore technopolitics Terraforming Tourist attractions urban governance urban redevelopment Urbanism |
title | BOTANIC URBANISM: The Technopolitics of Controlled Environments in Singapore's Gardens by the Bay |
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