Singapore is turning its skyscrapers into wind farms — engineering vertical axis wind turbines directly into new high-rise buildings so every tower generates its own clean electricity from urban wind.
The Building-Integrated Wind System developed by Nanyang Technological University installs compact vertical axis wind turbines in deliberately designed wind acceleration gaps between building floors at levels 20, 40, and 60 stories, where urban canyon airflow reaches speeds 3 times faster than ground level. Building aerodynamics are shaped during architectural design to channel wind from all directions toward turbine positions, ensuring generation regardless of wind direction. Each turbine cluster at a single floor gap generates 120 kilowatts, and three turbine levels per building provide 360 kilowatts of total wind generation capacity supplementing rooftop solar panels also integrated into the building systems.
Singapore's building energy regulations requiring new high-rises above 20 stories to achieve 30% energy self-sufficiency from 2026 onward drove adoption of this integrated wind technology. Combined with mandatory rooftop solar, building-integrated wind provides high-rises with 35-45% self-generated electricity, reducing grid dependence dramatically in a city-state where land scarcity makes conventional renewable farms impossible at meaningful scale.
Twelve buildings opened in 2024 and 2025 with integrated wind systems collectively generating 18 megawatts from urban airflow that previously served no energy function. Singapore's Urban Redevelopment Authority has mandated the technology in all new buildings exceeding 25 stories from January 2026.
Source: Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Urban Redevelopment Authority, 2025