ABOUT SAIA | AFFILIATIONS | REGIONAL INSTITUTES | SACAP | LINKS | FORUM | CONTACT US

Untitled Document
 

 
AWARDS OF MERIT 2006
       

 

SINGITA LEBOMBO LODGE – KRUGER NATIONAL PARK

For Singita Marketing (Pty) Ltd
omm Design Workshop CC


The Singita complex, a private concession situated on the eastern boundary of the Kruger National Park, is set against a rhyolite ridge of low hills that are part of the Lebombo mountains and is bounded by the N’wanetsi and Sweni Rivers. The Singita Lebombo lodge was the first of three interventions, the other being a second lodge and a commercial complex. While the chosen location has great scenic beauty and provides fantastic views over the N’wanetsi, it has a low absorption capacity for a range of negative impacts related to a physical development of this scale.

The architects have admirably taken up the responsibility that comes with designing for a site with these environmental qualities, and fulfilled the demands of the brief that required that the project be sustainable, have minimal impact on the environment and be easily removable at the end of the 20 year concession period. The choice of structure type and the positioning of structures on site ensure that there was minimal disturbance of the natural environment. Indigenous plant material and site features were protected vigorously, buildings in the most sensitive areas of the site were constructed on stilts, and the components of most buildings are demountable. The design incorporates for passive design principles to temper the extreme heat and humidity that is prevalent in the area, as can be seen in the use of lightweight materials, shade screens wrapping around the skins of inhabited spaces, the use of large overhangs over large glass surfaces, and in the use of mass to delay heat penetration for spaces that need constantly cool temperatures like the wine store tower. The liquid waste system was designed to prevent pollution of the N’wanetsi River. While the 5 star establishment provides every conceivable luxury on demand, patrons’ water use is restricted. It is admirable that the project used a large amount of local labour, that there was a high degree of skills transfer, and that the health profile of the local community increased positively due to the project’s sustainability approach.

The design has an active dialogue with both physical and intangible aspects of the site and the surrounding environment. The commonly used method of referring to traditionalist African architectural form and space typologies, which typify most game lodges in the country, are avoided in lieu of a critical regionalist approach. Neo-Modern architectural devices are used but details and elements are inspired by the local condition and through rich historical referencing. There is a synergy of crafting, engineering and space making. The architecture shows an honesty and ingenuity in terms of material use, in terms of the locality, detailing, assembly and finishes. There is a planned mix of foreign and local, high and low tech, engineered and on-site crafted elements. In all these dualisms there is engagement with the tangible and intangible dimensions of site as well as of the region.

Apart from possessing the required architectural qualities for an Award of Merit, the mastery shown achieving all the design objectives, in making meaningful place and an architecture with strong associations to place, in forging a non-stylistic approach to the existing bush lodge typology and in achieving a high level of sustainability, the Singita Lebombo complex expresses a high level of architectural excellence.