- 9789819431137
- A Luxury: Omnibus Edition
- A Tree To Take Us Up To Heaven
- After You
- AFTERIMAGE
- Alvin Pang
- An Anthology of Poems based on Artworks from the National Gallery Singapore
- AN EPIC OF DURABLE DEPARTURES
- And The Walls Come Crumbling Down
- AND THE WALLS COME CRUMBLING DOWN (2ND EDITION)
- Annaliza Bakri
- Anything but Human
- ARIA AND TRUMPET FLOURISH
- Below: Absence
- Capital Misfits
- Checkpoint Theatre
- cheryl julia lee
- Christine Chia
- creative non-fiction
- Cyril Wong
- Dana Lam
- Darren Soh
- Daryl Lim
- essays
- Everyday Modernism
- Faction Press
- Food Republic: A Singapore Literary Banquet
- Footnotes on Falling
- From The Belly Of The Cat
- Genevieve Wong
- Grace Chia
- I Bit Off More Than I Can Chew
- Jason Wee
- Jiat-Hwee Chang
- Jon Gresham
- Jordan Melic
- Joshua Ip
- Jr.
- Julie Koh
- Justin Zhuang
- Landmark Books
- Love and Life at the Gallery
- Math Paper Press
- Melissa De Silva
- memoir
- Mother Of All Questions
- National Gallery Singapore
- non-fiction
- novel
- NUS Press
- onerios
- Ooi Kee Beng
- Others' Is Not A Race
- Ow Yeong Wai Kit
- Poon Yew Fai
- Rodrigo Dela Peña
- satori blues
- Shaolin and You
- Sharen O
- Short stories
- Shze-Hui Tjoa
- Signals in the Noise
- Signals in the Noise: Notes on Penang
- SIKIT-SIKIT LAMA-LAMA JADI BUKIT
- Singapore's Sex Workers
- SOMEWHERE ELSE ANOTHER YOU
- Sonnets From The Sonnets
- Speak Cryptic
- Stephanie Ye
- Tania De Rozario
- TENDER DELIRIUM (3RD PRINTING)
- The Art of Being a Grandmother: An Incomplete Diary of Becoming
- The Law of Second Marriages
- The Missing Anthology
- The Missing Anthology: Stories from Singapore's Sex Workers
- THE MONSTERS BETWEEN US
- The Story Game
- UNINTERRUPTED TIME
- University of Canberra
- Unmarked Treasure
- We R Family
- WE ROSE UP SLOWLY (2ND PRINTING)
- Werner Ko
- What Gives Us Our Names
- What Happened: Poems 1997-2017
- 人文社科
- 其他
- 同志
- 國際關係
- 外文
- 小說
- 散文
- 新加坡
- 新加坡外文
- 書
- 本地
- 無法分類
- 繪本
- 翻譯
- 英文
- 華文
- 詩
- 貓
- 馬來文

Everyday Modernism: Architecture and Society in Singapore ◎Jiat-Hwee Chang and Justin Zhuang
平常價 $65.00Everyday Modernism is the first comprehensive documentation of Singapore’s modern built environment. Through a lens of social and architectural histories, the book uncovers the many untold stories of the Southeast Asian city-state’s modernization, from the rise of heroic skyscrapers, such as the Pearl Bank Apartments, to the spread of utilitarian typologies like the multi-storey car park. It investigates how modernism, through both form and function, radically transformed Singapore and made its inhabitants into modern citizens. The most intensive period of such change happened in the 1960s and 1970s under the rise of a developmental state seeking to safeguard its new-found independence. However, the book also looks both earlier and later, from between the 1930s to the 1980s, to cover a wider range of histories, building types and also architectural styles, expanding from the International Style and Brutalism and into Art Deco and even a touch of Postmodernism.
The book’s 33 essays are richly illustrated with some 200 archival images and drawings as well as more than 90 contemporary photos by architectural photographer Darren Soh. It covers the beginnings of Singapore's modern landscape, including its first condominium, columbarium, flatted factory, and pedestrian overhead bridge, amongst others. But the book is also interested in endings, investigating how modern buildings have changed over time, and been adapted for new uses or even threatened with redevelopment today. By examining the evolution of the once exceptional into the typical and by learning how abstract spaces become lived places, the book traces how modernism has become part of everyday life in Singapore.
- Donald McNeill, Professor of Urbanism, School of Architecture, Design and Planning, University of Sydney
- Miles Glendinning, Professor of Architectural Conservation, University of Edinburgh
- Hubert-Jan Henket, Founder and Honorary President of DOCOMOMO International
Jiat-Hwee Chang is associate professor at the Asia Research Institute and the Department of Architecture, National University of Singapore.
Justin Zhuang is a writer and researcher, and co-founder of Singapore-based writing studio In Plain Words.
Darren Soh is an award-winning photographer.