I flew Singapore Airlines to Malaysia and had a nine hour layover in Singapore. In addition to having
extensive comfort and shopping options in the airport, they have different city bus tours that you can take for free, if you have a long enough layover. After the twelve hour flight, which arrived at 6 AM, I signed up for the tour at a desk directly outside of my gate, grabbed a doughnut and a coffee, and met up with other tour-goers about an hour late to go through customs and get on the bus.
I happened to be there on the extra day off that most people were granted because it was the celebration of Singapore's 50th anniversary. Nevertheless, the tour guide was cheerful and full of good facts about how Singapore is a wonderful multi-cultural place to visit or live ("Please come back and stay for longer than the bus tour").
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| Part of the skyline from the highway into the city. |
The tour had two stops, but I would split it into three parts. The drive to the city, when we learned about the history of Singapore, the high proportion of public housing (85%), the dense public transit system, and where to get a good meal "very cheap". Almost every balcony of all of the high apartment buildings that we passed was sporting a Singaporean flag.
After passing by some colonial buildings and the Formula 1 track, we stopped near the financial district to look at the Merlion - a creature that has the body of a fish and the head of a lion. It symbolizes the city's origins as a fishing village and the roots of its name, which comes from "lion city" (someone probably got confused with a tiger, according to the tour guide).
On the way to the next stop w passed some buildings that evidenced the diversity in the city:
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| "We even have the Jews!" - tour-guide |
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| Not the best shot of a Hindu temple, but check out the color and detail + the national symbols celebrating the birthday. |
The next stop was near a big mosque, in an area full of adorable cafes like these, which were mostly closed:
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| Has a nutella sea salt tart |
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| Even a Swedish one |
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Rich and Good Cake Shop. This building style is called a shophouse
because there is a shop on the bottom floor that people live above. |
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Beancurd City! Actually not in that exact area, but we
passed it on the way and I love the name, colors, and mascot. |
Recreation opportunities for all ages:
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| Fun exercise options for seniors! |
And reminders of the birthday everywhere:
I didn't really have may expectations about the city, but was so surprised at how many massive buildings there were. The tour did a great job of selling the city as a livable/workable space, although I do not think it would be that interesting as a vacation destination.
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