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Lau Pa Sat from above. Lau Pa Sat (Chinese: 老巴刹; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Lāu Pa-sat; pinyin: Lǎo Bāshā; lit. 'Old Market'), also known as Telok Ayer Market (Malay: Pasar Telok Ayer; Chinese: 直落亚逸巴刹), is a historic building located within the Downtown Core in the Central Area of Singapore. It was first built in 1824 as a fish market ...
The stretch of Boon Tat Street beside Lau Pa Sat is closed to vehicular traffic at night, and stalls selling satay and dining areas then line up along the street.. Boon Tat Street (simplified Chinese: 文达街; traditional Chinese: 文達街; pinyin: Wén dá jiē) is in the Downtown Core in the Central Area of Singapore.
The Satay Club was the name of three open-air hawker centres in Singapore, all of which are no longer operating as of 2005. The first Satay Club ( c. 1940–1970) was located at Hoi How Road, near Beach Road; the second and third were located at the Esplanade (1970–1995) and Clarke Quay (1995–2005) respectively.
English: A map of Singapore published in The State of Singapore, published by the British Information Services in April 1959. This image is a composite map of two pages in the book, each having one half of the map.
Lau Pa Sat from above. His first major Singapore project was the Coleman Street Bridge which replaced a wooden bridge; over the 12 years of his career as Municipal Engineer he caused 'innumerable' bridges in Singapore to be replaced with iron bridges he designed. His design of small iron bridges first used in Singapore was soon being used ...
The following maps were originally prepared for Wikipedia:WikiProject Singaporean places. However, the project has since become inactive and was merged into Wikipedia:WikiProject Singapore on 5 August 2020. Right now, these images are of high resolutions for drafting purposes. These will be reduced to smaller size, before using in articles.
Name used in the default map caption; image = Singapore_location_map_(main_island).svg The default map image, without "Image:" or "File:" top = 1.493 Latitude at top edge of map, in decimal degrees; bottom = 1.129 Latitude at bottom edge of map, in decimal degrees; left = 103.557 Longitude at left edge of map, in decimal degrees; right = 104. ...
2014-10-19 14:11 Danielseoh 1321×1137× (939257 bytes) The two brown signs show the usage of languages on road signages, although variations exist between the Lau Pa Sat sign and the one for Merlion Park