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  2. Chee Guan Chiang House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chee_Guan_Chiang_House

    Chee Guan Chiang House, also known as the Wellington House, is an abandoned bungalow on Grange Road in River Valley, Singapore. Built in 1938 for Chee Guan Chiang, the son of Chee Swee Cheng , it served as a guest house for several years before it was left vacant.

  3. Housing and Development Board - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Housing_and_Development_Board

    One of the original HDB flats constructed in 1960, in July 2021.. On the Housing & Development Board (HDB)'s formation, it announced plans to build over 50,000 flats, mostly in the city, under a five-year scheme, [7] and found ways to build flats as cheaply as possible so that the poor could afford to stay in them. [8]

  4. Butterfly House, Singapore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butterfly_House,_Singapore

    Butterfly House, also known as 23 Amber Road, was a unique house, with a convex, semicircular plan, the 'wings' of which gave rise to the 'butterfly' nickhame for the house. It is not, in fact, laid out on a true butterfly plan in the more usual Arts and Crafts sense of the name. It was the only historic residence in Singapore to be built using ...

  5. The Golden Mile, Singapore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Golden_Mile,_Singapore

    The building was designed by Gan Eng Oon, William Lim and Tay Kheng Soon of the Singapore architect firm Design Partnership, now known as DP Architects. [ 4 ] Sited on 1.3 hectares and built to a height of 89 metres, [ 13 ] the Golden Mile Complex is an exemplary type of " megastructure " described by architectural historian, Reyner Banham .

  6. Crescent Flats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crescent_Flats

    The neighbouring building, named Meyer Flats, was completed in the following year. [1] After the end of the Japanese Occupation of Singapore, the block was one of several civilian buildings that were occupied by the Royal Air Force. [8] The Royal Air Force vacated the building, then owned by Kitty Meyer, in 1949, after which it was left unoccupied.

  7. Architecture of Singapore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Architecture_of_Singapore

    Singapore's most prominent architect in the early colonial era was George Drumgoole Coleman, who was responsible for many of these early European style buildings, few of which survived. [4] Those that did include the old Parliament house and Caldwell House at CHIJMES. In the 19th century, two hybrid building typologies evolved in Singapore ...

  8. Dakota Crescent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dakota_Crescent

    One of the plans included developing the Kallang area (just to the east of the town-centre) into Singapore's equivalent of London's Hyde Park. This master-plan was reported in the local newspaper, The Straits Times, dated from 11 March 1955. [8] The low-rise brick-clad flats of Dakota Crescent Estate were built by SIT in 1958. [9]

  9. Selegie House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selegie_House

    Construction of Selegie House as a mixed residential building project begun in 1962, costing $3.8 million, a labour of 151,212 people, and supply of used materials from local quarries. [5] The complex included three larger blocks, with the tallest being twenty stories high, which made it the 5th tallest modern housing in Singapore at the time ...