Located at Waterloo, the project occupies a hinge between parks, green corridors, and community hubs, transforming these latent links into a coherent public spine.
New planted pathways extend existing networks through the site, functioning as both circulation and civic ground that organises programs and invites informal gathering. A landscape strategy reinstates former wetland ecologies through layered vegetation, shaded groves, and water-sensitive planting, creating immersive habitats that attract birds, pollinators, and small wildlife while framing everyday movement.
Workspaces, makerspaces, and community gardens are arranged along these corridors, opening to landscape and terraces rather than turning inward. This arrangement dissolves hard boundaries between work, culture, and public life, positioning architecture as an active framework for collective use rather than a privatised container.
Drawing on Murawski’s Social Condenser, the project embeds shared green infrastructure to support community, equity, and ecological awareness in the precinct.