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February, 2026

Brutal Beauty Meets Luxury Living: The Coronation Road Home by Aamer Architects

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Image by: David Yeow 

At Aamer Architects, we approach residential design as an opportunity to merge artistry with functionality. The Modern Art Brut – Coronation Road home demonstrates how brutalist architecture can be adapted for luxury living in Singapore. Bold, sculptural, and unapologetically raw, the house embraces off-form concrete as both an aesthetic statement and a practical material suitable for tropical conditions. Yet beneath its imposing exterior lies a carefully considered spatial and sensory experience, designed to elevate everyday living.

Originally a semi-detached house, we transformed the Coronation Road home into a detached 2½-storey bungalow featuring a basement, swimming pool, and car lift. The design draws inspiration from both Brutalism and Modern Art, resulting in a sculptural façade composed of layered forms, planes, and geometric shapes. Off-form concrete forms the primary material, contrasted elegantly with dark granite cladding and a sleek aluminium roof structure, creating a bold yet harmonious architectural statement.

Through this project, we demonstrate how brutalist architecture can evolve beyond its industrial roots to become a sophisticated, luxurious, and liveable design language suitable for modern urban Singapore.

Using Off-Form Concrete in Singapore’s Climate

Off-form concrete is at the heart of the Coronation Road home, offering strength, sculptural versatility, and durability in Singapore’s humid climate. Its thermal mass helps regulate indoor temperatures, while its raw, textured quality gives the home a distinctive presence. Each concrete plane is positioned to optimise ventilation, daylight, and weather resilience, showing how brutalist architecture can perform beautifully in a tropical urban context.

Brutalist architecture home featuring exposed concrete forms, geometric volumes, and a dramatic illuminated entryway.

Image by: David Yeow 

Softening Concrete

While concrete provides boldness and presence, we balance its visual weight with tactile and environmental interventions that humanise the space. Timber accents along interior walls, textured concrete surfaces, and strategically placed landscaped courtyards all work together to soften the rawness of the material. Skylights and open voids allow daylight to penetrate deep into the interior, reducing heaviness and creating a sense of openness.

The integration of greenery further enhances the home’s warmth. These natural elements not only provide visual contrast but also create a sensory connection to the outdoors. By introducing light, texture, and nature, we demonstrate that brutalist architecture can feel intimate, inviting, and liveable, rather than cold or austere. The result is a home that feels sculptural yet welcoming, a residence where urban material meets human comfort.

Function, Privacy, and Proportion

The Coronation Road site presented typical urban challenges faced when building in Singapore: a constrained plot, neighbouring houses close by, and complex sightlines. Each line, volume, and cantilever was carefully orchestrated to address these challenges. Sculptural roof forms, layered walls, and strategic voids define functional zones, optimise views, and ensure privacy for all areas of the house.

Terraces and balconies are cantilevered to frame outdoor views without compromising neighbourly sightlines. Windows are positioned to maximise daylight while maintaining privacy. In this home, every architectural decision, from the overall design to the smallest detail, serves multiple purposes: aesthetic expression, functional efficiency, and spatial comfort. This careful design concept is a defining characteristic of brutalist architecture when applied thoughtfully to luxury residential projects.

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Image by: David Yeow

Dynamic black and white interior design: geometric staircase in the Coronation Road Modern Art Brut bungalow.

Image by: David Yeow

Craftsmanship and Spatial Flow

At Coronation Road, precise craftsmanship transforms raw concrete, timber, and stone into a seamless, elegant composition. Surfaces are meticulously finished, and the junctions between materials are treated with care to achieve visual harmony. Spatial flow has been designed so that movement through the house feels intuitive, guiding residents from one area to another while highlighting key architectural moments.

Natural light interacts dynamically with walls, volumes, and textures, creating patterns and shadows that change throughout the day. Courtyards, terraces, and voids enhance both visual and spatial connections. In this way, brutalist architecture becomes a medium not only for sculptural expression but also for creating a sophisticated, liveable, and luxurious environment. The interplay of materiality, light, and form elevates the home beyond mere structure into an experience.

Discover Aamer Architects

The Coronation Road home exemplifies how brutalist architecture can be adapted for modern luxury living in Singapore. By embracing off-form concrete while softening its edges with light, timber, and landscape, the design achieves a balance between boldness and warmth. Functional planning, privacy-sensitive massing, and meticulous craftsmanship further elevate the home into a refined, liveable, and enduring architectural statement.

For homeowners seeking a residence that combines sculptural expression, functional excellence, and personal lifestyle integration, the Coronation Road project demonstrates how architecture can transform urban constraints into a masterpiece of concrete, light, and space.

Explore our other projects or get in touch with us to start designing a home that reflects your lifestyle and personality today.

 

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