Redevelopment, when done poorly, may renew the facilities yet sweep away the original form, and with it memories and meaning. Done well, it keeps the old alive within the new.
The reworked Delta Sport Centre, first completed in 1979 as one of the first HDB sports complexes in Singapore, shows how. Its architects respected the original structures, which carry no heritage protection, while adding new facilities and a public route through the site. It won Design of the Year at the 2025 President’s Design Award.
A CONVERSATION WORTH HAVING
Our statutes already recognise a broad spectrum of heritage value, but what is missing is a framework that can act on that spectrum consistently.
We do not need to save every building but we do need a system that weighs trade-offs honestly, offers owners viable paths to retention where it makes sense, and carries forward the physical traces of our nation-building era.
That begins with how we regard the everyday buildings around us. Their value may not be the same kind of heritage as nineteenth-century shophouses, colonial civic buildings or national monuments. It simply lies in a different register: in everyday life, institutional memory, social use and the lived experience of a rapidly modernising city.
In a city built on transformation, the real question is not only what we conserve or demolish, but what we choose to let endure, and in what form.
Yeo Kang Shua is Associate Professor of Architectural History, Theory and Criticism, and Architecture and Sustainable Design at the Singapore University of Technology and Design.