Compound System: Landscape — Catalyst — Urban Part 2 Project 2025 Huajin Wang Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University | China The project brief responds to Singapore’s most ambitious planning vision: the Greater Southern Waterfront. As a pivotal initiative to reshape the city’s landscape, it aims to reimagine a strategic coastal corridor integrating residential, commercial, and recreational spaces while honoring Singapore’s maritime heritage.The proposal includes comprehensive urban-scale master planning and architectural design concepts, focused on redeveloping the former Keppel Club golf course. The project connects city and nature through a composite infrastructure system, enabling economic and developmental sustainability for evolving urban contexts. Three key systems are designed: 1) Urban infrastructure hosts functions and street activities, using open interfaces and flexible layouts to integrate with urban fabric and reserve adaptive space for future function upgrades; 2) The green system acts as a link between city and nature, combining landscape and ecological sustainability to connect nature reserves, neglected landscapes, and managed landscapes, forming a “nature-semi-natural-city” ecological transition zone;3) Catalyst nodes, placed at functional junctions, activate interactions through mixed uses and flexible spaces. Working in concert, these systems allow architecture to adapt to different urban development stages, achieving sustainability in economic and urban growth. This creates a resilient framework from a city-development logic to address Singapore’s shrinking forests and urban expansion. Tutor(s) Mia Tedjosaputro