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  2. Singapore Sports Hub - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singapore_Sports_Hub

    The Sports Hub was a public-private partnership with SportsHub Pte Ltd, [7] which is made up of four companies namely InfraRed Capital Partners, Dragages Singapore, DTZ Facilities and Engineering and Global Spectrum Asia. [8] SHPL was engaged in 2008 [8] and has a 25-year contract to design, build, finance and operate the Sports Hub. [9]

  3. National Stadium, Singapore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Stadium,_Singapore

    The 55,000-seat facility is the centrepiece of the Singapore Sports Hub, a sports and recreation district that also incorporates nearby Singapore Indoor Stadium and other sporting venues. One of the largest domed structures in the world, it features a naturally-ventilated design with a retractable roof , and has configurations for football ...

  4. World Sport Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Sport_Group

    World Sport Group was founded in Hong Kong in 1992 as AFC Marketing Limited as a media broker for the Asian Football Confederation. (AFC Marketing itself was dissolved by striking-off in 2006) At that time the director of the company was Seamus Hamilton O'Brien and Jack Kazunori Sakazaki; the shareholders were British Virgin Islands incorporated Park House Holdings Limited (40%), Nina Finance ...

  5. Singapore Sports Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singapore_Sports_Museum

    In 2007, its collection was temporarily moved to the Singapore Sports Council's (SSC) temporary office and heritage corners of selected SSC sports and recreation centres such as Jurong West and Sengkang, while a new iteration of the museum was constructed as part of the Singapore Sports Hub project, originally expected to be completed by 2011. [1]

  6. Sport Singapore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sport_Singapore

    Sport Singapore was founded on 1 October 1973 as the Singapore Sports Council (SSC), through the merger of the National Sports Promotion Board (NSPB) and the National Stadium Corporation (NSC). [1] On 1 April 2014, the SSC was renamed Sport Singapore in a rebranding exercise.

  7. Singaporean Canadians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singaporean_Canadians

    During the 1970s, arrivals to Canada from Singapore numbered less than 100 per year while in the following decade, immigrants born in Singapore averaged between 200 and 400. In the years 1989–91, arrivals from Singapore approached 1,000. [2] Many Singaporeans are employed by Canadian companies or in the public sector, including universities.

  8. List of stadiums in Singapore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_stadiums_in_Singapore

    Anderson Junior College Sports Field: Ang Mo Kio: No: Yes: Anglo-Chinese Junior College Sports Field: Queenstown: No: Yes [2] Catholic Junior College Sports Field: Novena: No: Yes [3] Dunman High School Sports Field: Kallang: No: Yes [4] Innova Junior College Sports Field: Woodlands: No: Yes [5] Jurong Junior College Sports Field: Jurong West ...

  9. Kallang Field - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kallang_Field

    Kallang Field and the adjacent Tennis Centre are part of the Kallang Sports Complex. Currently home to Singapore’s cricketers, the field is also used for softball . Spanning an area of more than 50,000 square metres (540,000 sq ft), the Kallang Field was the venue for the prestigious Singer Cup cricket tournament in 1996, involving teams from ...