Singapore Fling
In December 2007, Nicolette de Waart, her husband, Joost Dop, and their four children moved from Heemstede, the Netherlands, to Singapore. While Dop began his new job, De Waart set out to find someplace for them to live. In the process of turning a house into their home, she also found a footing for her interior design business, Design Doctors, an extension of her well-established Dutch company, De Stijlfabriek. De Waart tells her tale of procuring (and piecing together) a place for her family in the big city.
We moved to Singapore for my husband’s job. We worried about being far away from family, but there are always reasons why you shouldn’t do something. We decided to look at it as a big adventure and just do it.
When we first moved here, we lived in a 24th-floor apartment. It was quite shocking for us, because in Heemstede, a suburb of Amsterdam, we lived in a house with a nice garden and an outdoor kitchen. Looking out the windows of our apartment in Singapore, we could only see concrete. There was always construction noise, as we were living close to Orchard Road, the main shopping street. For Singaporeans, it was really great, but for us, it wasn’t ideal.
Finding a place to rent was hard. We were used to living in a green environment, and that was really important to us. Singaporeans, however, are less focused on their gardens than on their houses, which seemingly should be as big as possible and completely air-conditioned. Our first real estate agent showed me properties with closed, dark rooms. When I switched to an agent who understood what I wanted, we found the right home in two weeks. The house is on a street with what were originally seven other similarly designed residences, all built in the 1970s. Our home is the only one that remains unchanged. All the others were renovated to enclose the balconies and add more interior rooms.
“Every house we looked at had curtains over all the windows,” De Waart says. “Our first real estate agent thought it was strange that I wanted to remove them, but Dutch people like to have very open spaces.”
The house has three floors. The lowest floor is where you enter and where I have my atelier. The main space has a living room, dining room, kitchen, office, and guest room. Go up one more level and there are four bedrooms and a big family room. There are balconies and a garden all around the house, so it’s nice and green. There’s a weird place cut out of the back where, in the past, a chauffeur could have waited. Most people would have closed it up and added it as another room, but we turned it into an outdoor play space.
De Waart added a chalkboard to the kitchen for writing memos and for drawing, as Tammo does here.
The house had sat empty for nine months before we moved in. Here, it’s tropical and always in the high 80s, so everything falls into disrepair twice as fast. The kitchen was horrible, but we were lucky because the landlord let us renovate it. We kept it simple and stuck to white to make it look bigger. We almost always cook at home and eat outdoors. The kids like to draw in the living room and play in the family room. We really use the whole house; I try to make every room somewhere you’d like to be.
We brought all of our furniture with us from Holland. We’re attached to our stuff—–not in a materialistic way but because everything has a story behind it. I wanted to surround myself with pieces that would be recognizable. It made the kids feel immediately at home.
The house lacked significant storage space when the family moved in, so De Waart designed bookcases to custom-fit their favorite display items.
Missing, though, were bookcases. I designed some myself and had a local carpenter build them as a trial run for whether he’d be able to execute my other designs, which have since included work for a restaurant and many homes here. In Holland, I’m accustomed to working together with a carpenter to create a design. Here, the individual tasks are managed by different shops, so fabricating an item requires many players. I did a lot of research to find tradespeople and suppliers, and I went to many shops and factories. Everyone was shocked that I, a white woman and a stranger, came to the stores myself and didn’t just send a messenger. They found it funny, but in the end, a lot of people have asked if they can work with me.
We love living here. Singapore has a lot of development and there is construction 24 hours a day, but there’s so much natural beauty too. We cycle and hike. There’s an eco-farm where you can see where a banana comes from and what kind of tree a papaya grows on. The kids love to swim in the lake there, and they have a nice restaurant for lunch. Singapore might seem like one big shopping mall from the outside, but there’s so much to do and see when you peel back the layers. That’s what I love about it.
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Singapore is clean, graffiti-and-gum-free and safe. Even the highway guardrails have well-clipped hedging to cover their frank ugliness. That's civilized, but it takes a bit of homework to have an unprogrammed experience there. We tried: we took a "dive" with the rays in the aquarium, went to the gardens very early in the morning, ate in Little India and did yoga with a cool guy named Jay at Shambhala off the Orchard strip. There is a lot to see or do, but if you're an outdoor person at heart your soul will shrivel and you will yearn for the wilds of Malaysia to the north.
What a lovely home, Nicolette! You couldn't have said it better. Here in Singapore, the general public has yet learned how to appreciate wide open-spaces, and beautiful home gardens. I try very hard to keep my apartment airy and "breathable" as possible, and it's sure inspiring to see someone else doing it in Singapore!
this looks photoshopped!!
Thank you for this story.... I too moved far from family from the endless mountains of Pennsylvania to Seattle, Washington. Yes, "there are always reasons why you shouldn’t do something." We too decided to look at it as a big adventure and just do it. We hoped in our Oregon Trail Wagon (minivan) and moved west; rented for 3 months; then purchased a fixer upper with a view of Puget Sound. The house is of modern architecture, a fun project. It took a year to redesign, tear out the delapidated kitchen and install the new. We love it. Between life with the children and seasonal events, it is slow going. Thank you for your inspiration in living, designing and creating!
Simple, yet and airy....I'll just missed singapore.
Right, the Dutch like open spaces, which is why they built tall, dark, narrow rowhouses in Amsterdam that taxed homeowners according to the number of windows they had. If you enjoy Singapore, just appreciate it, don't dish out backhanded self-compliments and at the same time insult the people of the country you now live in.
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