SINGAPORE -
Media OutReach Newswire - 11 June 2026 - Singapore-based Hydrantula, will unveil the solution over Singapore International Water Week 2026.
As Singapore and its neighbours plan decades of investment to defend
low-lying coasts against rising seas, a local company is proposing a
different way to build the structures that do the work − assembling most
of the structures on land and finishing the final works in the water.
A coastline problem with no single answer
Singapore has more than 300km of coastline, and no single solution
fits all of it. About 70 to 80 per cent is currently protected by
seawalls and stone embankments, and the national water agency PUB has
said the country needs solutions that are both cost-effective and
multifunctional, given its limited land. Sea levels around Singapore
could rise by up to about 1m by 2100, and higher still when combined
with high tides and storm surges.
Conventional marine construction is slow and expensive, largely
because much of the work is done in the water, using heavy equipment,
divers and processes such as pile driving that disturb the seabed.
Hydrantula, a Singapore-based company, has been developing a method
intended to move most of that work back onto land
Building on land, finishing at sea
The system uses a lightweight, permanent formwork built from standard
HDPE pipes joined by moulded plastic nodes. The frame is assembled
onshore − the company estimates around 90 per cent of the work is done
on land − then lowered into position and filled with reinforced concrete
pumped from the bottom up, displacing the water inside. Once the
concrete hardens, the result is a monolithic reinforced-concrete
structure within a plastic shell.
Because the geometry is set by the pipework rather than by custom
moulds, the company says the same family of parts can form a range of
structures, from floating breakwaters and seawalls to jetty foundations,
mooring ramps and terraced, beach-retaining shoreline structures.
Hydrantula says the approach can cut construction time by roughly two to
three times, and cost to around a third of conventional methods, for
equivalent reinforced-concrete structures. It also estimates the
life-cycle carbon of its structures at about 5 tonnes of CO
2
per metre over 60 years, against roughly 25 tonnes for conventional
reinforced concrete, based on the company's own assessment to ISO
14040/14044. These are design targets and company estimates rather than
independently certified figures.
Designed to host marine life
The open frame is intended to let wave energy pass through rather than
reflect it and does not seal the seabed beneath a solid foundation. Over
time, the submerged plastic surfaces are colonised by marine organisms,
so the structure can also function as an artificial reef − an approach
in line with the "hybrid" coastal solutions, combining hard structures
with nature, that researchers in Singapore are actively studying. The
company targets a service life of more than 60 years.
"Most of the cost, the risk and the environmental disturbance in
marine construction comes from working in the water. If you can do the
bulk of the work on land and keep the disturbance at sea short, the
economics and the footprint both change. We are not trying to out-build
nature − we are trying to build with it."
− Nikita Shcherbina, Co-Founder of Hydrantula PTE Ltd
Still to be proven at scale
The technology is at an early commercial stage. Hydrantula has proposals
and pilot discussions under way in Singapore, elsewhere in Southeast
Asia and in California, and is pursuing research collaboration with
Singapore academic partners to test its structural performance and
ecological behaviour under local conditions. Its performance and
durability claims have yet to be verified in long-term field use.
The company will present the system at Singapore International Water
Week 2026 (SIWW2026 booth number: L1-A23), which runs from 15 to 18 June
at the Sands Expo & Convention Centre, Marina Bay Sands.