Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The terminal was constructed in 1995 at a cost of S$29 million with the intention of boosting tourism. [2] The terminal began operations on 26 August. [3] In 2007, the terminal, along with the Singapore Cruise Centre, received a $2.5 million IT upgrade, along with a $3 million facelift.
Doulos ended her final cruise in late 2009 at Singapore, with the ship being handed over to her new owners on 18 March 2010. The ship underwent a three year conversion into a luxury hotel that saw the ship mounted on dry land in nearby Bintan , Indonesia and opened in June 2019.
Singapore, the closest major city, is a 45-50 minute trip by motorised catamaran across the Singapore Strait from Bintan Resort area in the northwest of the island. The island has beaches with beach-front hotels and resorts; the most prominent of these beaches is the Bintan Resorts set over an area of 300 hectares (740 acres) of tropical ...
Download as PDF; Printable version ... and Tanjung Pinang serves international ferry routes to Singapore and Malaysia. Ferries connect Batam to Singapore, Bintan, ...
STS is a B2C online travel agent retailing travel products from Bintan, Batam, Karimun and Singapore through its portal WOW Getaways. In 2024, it was announced that SCC would be closed and merged with the expanded Marina Bay Cruise Centre to free up space along the Greater Southern Waterfront .
Bintan Lagoon Resort is a hotel and resort complex on the north coast of Bintan, Indonesia.It is located 75 minutes by direct high-speed ferry from Singapore.The resort and ferry, is set in over 300 hectares of gardens overlooks the South China Sea and the archipelago of the Riau Islands.
The enclave is operated by PT Bintan Resort Cakrawala. Although the area is within Indonesian territory, Bintan Resorts is marketed at residents from nearby Singapore, for whom Bintan is a short ferry trip away. The area is generally a short-stay destination, with 90% of visitors staying less than seven days. [1]
The Port of Singapore, run by the port operators PSA International (formerly the Port of Singapore Authority) and Jurong Port, is the world's busiest in terms of shipping tonnage handled. 1.04 billion gross tons were handled in 2004, crossing the one billion mark for the first time in Singapore's maritime history.