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This is a list of parks in Singapore that currently exist and have articles on Wikipedia. Most parks in Singapore are managed by the National Parks Board, although smaller, neighbourhood parks are managed by the Housing Development Board. Most of these parks are connected via the Park Connector Network (PCN) walking/running/cycling paths.
Bedok Reservoir Chinese Garden East Coast Park Gardens by the Bay Mount Faber Singapore Botanic Gardens Singapore River Singapore Zoo Southern Ridges Ubin Island Upper Seletar Reservoir. Popular tourist attractions in Singapore include the following:
Bedok (IPA: /bəˈdoʊk/ bə-DOHK) is a planning area and residential town located in the geographical region of Tanah Merah along the south-eastern coast of the East Region of Singapore. Bedok is bounded by five other planning areas: Paya Lebar to the north, Hougang to the northwest, Tampines to the northeast and east, Geylang to the west and ...
Only Brunei and Timor-Leste (East Timor) lack World Heritage Sites. [1] [2] Indonesia lead the list with ten inscribed sites, followed by Thailand and Vietnam each have eight inscribed sites, with the Philippines has six, Malaysia five, Cambodia four, Laos three, Myanmar two, and Singapore one. [3]
Malaysia has a number of national parks, but most of them are de facto state parks. This page provides the list of protected areas and pictures associated with the facilities and activities available in each area.
East Coast Park is a beach and a park on the southeastern coast of Singapore. It stretches along the south of Marine Parade , Bedok , and Tampines . It was opened in the 1970s, after the Singapore government had completed reclaiming land off the coast at Katong , from Kallang to Changi .
Under a bilateral agreement signed between Singapore and Malaysia in 2010, the railway land was returned to Singapore. [5] Since then, the railway land has largely been kept untouched and has only recently been actively redeveloped as a green corridor , with access points being gradually added throughout the 24-km stretch of land.
Located on the west of the park is the Sembawang Shipyard, which was His Majesty's Naval Base (HM Naval Base) of the British Royal Navy from the 1920s until Singapore's independence. The busy and geographically advantaged port in Singapore and the urgent need for a naval base made the British decide to establish a Naval Base in Singapore.