Märkt: SG50

Tiong Bahru, a story of survival and new light

Okay this is a long one, but a good one.

As another blogger wrote: ”She’s old school. She’s charming. She’s so hipster it hurts. She’s Tiong Bahru.”. 

This is common underline to explaining what Tiong Bahru is. So why is that? It is actually one of the oldest social housing projects in Singapore, from the 1930s. So in Singaporean terms, it’s older than the country itself. After some fast googling, Tiong Bahru actually means ”new cementry” and was before filled with cemeteries which is today long gone. If you really wanna dig into neardy stuff, the architecture style that emerged during the 30s and is apparent here is called Streamline Modern, or Art Modern.

It’s arguably the number one hipster area – that is – a lot of cool cafes, some with a little Italian/French style to it, good eco-fair-trade coffee, waffles, bakeries, design and art galleries, small bookshops (only found one here though?), and even smaller shops with old LPs hanging in the window, and there is supposed to be cool young people hanging around. And of course the area is old, usually it’s a bit rough around the edges, which is supposed to be cool and add to the hip feeling.

There are two interesting side stories to this area. The first one, is that apparently the cafe Forty Hands (where we took a coffee upon our first visit here) which opened in 2010 started the whole thing of making this area into what it is today. The founder was pleased in finding a gem of a place. More tagged along and did so under the same locale developer. Now the Forty Hands owner, talks about how it’s a shame that so many cafes and shops are established in the area causing it to be gentrified. Well, what a surprise.

The other thing is that as late as this year, the URA (Urban Redevelopment Authority in Singapore, deals with all the things surrounding planning and development) started kicking out ground floor businesses in the area. Locale residents has complained about increased noise levels, pollution and congestion in the area and some of the shops didn’t have the proper license to turn there ground floor flats into business space with open doors to the passing by public. It’s only been four years, as I understand, and I have no idea how it was before really but it seems the changes has been pretty extensive in some ways.

The area sounds to be totally buzzing with people, cars, noise, action and life. Well I would say that is a lively place, but my first impression is that is a world apart from the Singapore I’ve seen. Or the other hip places we’ve been to so far. It is so calm and subtle, the whole scale is just so much smaller. You walk trough Tiong Bahru in 15 minutes, tops. I thought at first we had come to the wrong place because of the lack of people on the streets.

But the contrasts are never far away in this city. The food market and hawker center is packed with people, from the streets outside you just hear a silent buzz, knowing that something is going on. Here it looks like any locale hawker, diverse of people and food.

The architecture of this area is interesting in another way than just being old and unusual, but because of the floors above ground are ”hanging out”, you can’t really see what is going on at ground floor. Like the cafes are a little bit hidden. And it actually looks like some places are place homes, made into something else which I didn’t at the time know was the case.

And oh the cars on the streets, I think they say something about how thick some of the wallets are around here.

In all of these older neighborhoods, you’re always reminded about how most modern life looks like in Singapore. In almost every picture, you see an HDB high-rise climbing it’s way into the background. Areas like Tiong Bahru are like the grounds and roots of the thick rain forests, some life and species will just die out if these places are run over.

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Happy birthday Singapore 50 years of independence!

So on the 9th of august, Singapore celebrated its 50th year as an independent country. You could argue about what the country was and what it has become, and of course the history of the region and Singapore as a city stretches further back than that. Many places has colonial roots back into the 1800s, for example the Botanic gardens. Since a month it’s Singapore’s first world heritage, originally founded by the Englishman Sir Stamford Raffles (who in some way founded Singapore. You see ”Raffles” everywhere here) in 1822. Yeah the city was a fisher village 50 years ago, but it was still something more than that, and apparently something to fight for.

Well. The Malayan government didn’t really bother and expelled Singapore from the state of Malaysia (which three years earlier had gained independence from the British), without any Singapore delegations or state politician present practically forcing Singapore to become an own country. Social unrest and riots started to materialize, the first prime minister Lee Kuan Yew had much to handle but quite quickly set out the path for Singapore to become what it is today. The father of Singapore has created something no nation, state, city or region in the world has ever managed, I would say. And he did it during the space of a lifetime. Yes you could argue about the road, the ways of means, the politics, whatever glasses you look through it’s not crystal clear fantastic – but it is still impressive.

So what about the celebration?

I can’t enough describe what kind of preparation and hype that has been going on here. I have seen so many ”SG50” signs, notes, commercials, flags, toys, cakes, whatever you can imagine. I’ve heard songs about Singapore everywhere. And they have been practicing for the fireworks and jet show for quite some time. There is sales surrounding SG50, free entries, reduced prices on beer at bars. Someone said to me; EVERYONE wants to be associated with the ”good feeling” surrounding the national day. Oh there were just so many people in the city. It was like I imagined Singapore to be all the time, crowded with people everywhere I turn my head, impossible to get on a MRT during peak hours and in central places. Which was more my stereotype generalization of an ”Asian city”. It was quite funny to look at the floods of people as they were tides of waves, or ants that only had one way of direction in there minds.

We found a nice place near Marina Bay where the fireworks and the show was centered around. I haven’t seen the parade yet, they broadcast it on a screen which I couldn’t really see. The whole place was like a big festival, people with the families, wearing red and white of course, some had food that would last a day, some popping champagne and such. We had chips, ice tea and water. We were pretty happy though.

I suggest you search for ”SG50”, ”Independence Singapore”, or whatever on youtube to see a bit of the show. They are good at showing off here, I think it’s pretty nice and funny. People were singing, eating, drinking, taking tons of photos, listening to an over-hyped speaker that screamed out to probably hundreds of thousand people, there were jets, there were helicopters, there were fire works. Hard not to enjoy.

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Sentosa Island

So we took a little trip to Sentosa Island. Which is an Island south of Singapore’s inner city. There you have an aquarium, Universal Studios, restaurants, shops, hotels, some other attractions – and a beach where we were heading. It’s like a little resort Island with a lot of stuff really. It was a nice day out and we got a swim as well, in the probably half oily filled water. With a view over the industries in the harbor poring out pollution and such nice things as well as a lot of carriage ships it is a little funny place actually. Doesn’t feel like there should be a beach there. But hey it was great!

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Hawker centers – one of the most socially diverse places around?

OK, I started out with something completely different but I had to make it a post by itself.

A hawker center. As I understand it, Singapore used to be filled with street food stalls. How a city shows it’s ethnic diversity is a lot of times showcased in the variety of food at it’s disposal. Singapore is probably one of the most ethnically diverse places you will ever visit (they are quite good at labeling that themselves), and food has almost in every part of the world a cultural history and traditions that comes along with it. So you can imagine there are a lot of hawkers dwelling on the streets. It was a place to get fordable food for many, but it came with the price of being heavily unsanitary, and there was no license for serving, and for many I would imagine no electricity and therefore no cooling system for the food. So at 30 degrees, there is not much that can stay fresh for too long.

So basically the government wanted to fix the problem related to hygiene and the hawkers, and maybe something about the image of the city as well if I may add some personal analyze. So what they did was to mass them altogether in centers where every stall had to get a license and also graded for there cleanness. You can see the ”grades” hang at every stall today, though most of them seem to be outdated with a few months.

The government found a way to regulate the food stalls, and today the Hawker centers seem to be a factor of identity for Singapore and I would presume most of the hygienic problems are stable by now. The food here is cheap (a meal for 2-5SGD/1-3 euro varies a bit between locations), authentic from most corners of the world, made on spot and just one of many buzzing places where life goes on during most hours of the day. It’s a place where all kinds of people eat and meet, and the centers are everywhere!

Street smart now how fact: People run around to grab something different from what they had the day before, or maybe have to queue at the most popular stall. So people reserve their seat, by leaving some possession and then they can walk around. You do not sit at a place that is ”reserved”, that is a big nono. It is not on my bucket list trying to see a locales reaction if I actually do, but I would imagine the whole place going dark and thunderbolts flying from heaven and fire form hell spitting out from the cracks in the ground. Wouldn’t really be worth it I suppose.

And yeah, people sometimes leave phones and cameras and everything. Because nobody would steal in Singapore, you know.

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First day exploring

 

 

First day. Jet lagged and haven’t really caught up with the fact I’m in Asia. Or actually 10,000 km away from all of my homes. Best way is to just get down to business I guess. Met up with some nice people during the night when I took a stroll around my little living area here at campus, so I joined for some lunch and exploring the next day. Pictures below.

So I live in Prince George’s Park Residence, at the south east edge of the campus area, with no AC in a tiny room. Oh god. But the bathrooms (which I share) are just across the narrow hall so it practically feels like mine. Every single one of the nice toilet and shower booths. One of the good thing is that it’s so cheap (thank you subsided student living, Singapore Government) I have money over for better things than staying at home, and I actually think I can get used to the heat here with the ceiling fan being my best friend. ‘

The room is SG$440 (around 2450sek/240euro) and I have a shared kitchen at my floor. The residence area has a lot of blocks with student living, two canteen food courts, a cafe, a market where you could buy practically everything, a basic gym, basketball- and tennis courts. They are actually right outside my window so I have some live basketball and also cricket going on here. Then there are air-conditioned reading and study rooms as well.

Shuttle buses around campus goes right outside and it’s about 5 minutes walk to Kent Ridge MRT (public transport/subway/metro) station where you have a mall with some shops, restaurants and a quite good grocery store. Apparently every MRT station has more or less a mall, and some of them are like real shopping centers.

So over to some nice pictures of our first day exploring. We ate in China town, went to the beautiful Buddhist temple, and then further on to the Marina Bay Sands were we walked around for a bit, Marina Bay Gardens and ended the night at Marina Bay Barrage watching the city skyline.

And a note to my grandparents who where here 1999. Yes it is a bit different since you visited!

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The skyline is just something out of this world. I cannot explain how it is in real life, you feel quite numb and find yourself searching for words, a explanation. But sometimes it is better to not talk, or try to figure it all out. It just is.