enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Great World, Singapore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_World,_Singapore

    Great World City was completed in October 1997 as a redevelopment of the former Great World Amusement Park. [1] When it first opened, it had an OG department store (closed in 2003), a Golden Village cinema, a Food Junction food court, a Cold Storage supermarket and more than 130 specialty shops. The Golden Village cinema was the first to ...

  3. Bugis Junction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bugis_Junction

    Bugis Junction, formerly known as Parco Bugis Junction is an integrated development located at Victoria Street, Middle Road and North Bridge Road in Bugis, Downtown Core in Singapore. The development consists of a shopping mall, an office tower and the InterContinental Singapore Hotel. [1]

  4. The Golden Mile, Singapore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Golden_Mile,_Singapore

    The complex was designed as a "vertical city", which stands in contrast to homogenised cities where functional zoning restrains all signs of the latter's vitality. [ 4 ] Conceived as a prototype for a lively environment, the design of the Golden Mile Complex was intended to catalyse urban development along Beach Road by employing an extruded ...

  5. Ngee Ann City - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ngee_Ann_City

    In 2005, the shopping mall opened an art and creativity section on the 4th floor called iFORUM, the first of its kind in Singapore. When Ngee Ann City opened in 1993, Tangs Studio (a division of Tangs) occupied three floors of the building at the Tower B section of the building. A few years later, Level 2 of the department store was closed in ...

  6. Tangs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tangs

    View at night (2007) The building form was influenced by traditional Chinese culture and architecture, modeled after the Palaces in the Forbidden City.The color scheme of C.K. Tang building mimics a traditional imperial palace, with the green roof tiles symbolizing the notion of growth and prosperity, the yellow facade symbolizing the color of royalty, and red columns representing happiness.

  7. Fountain of Wealth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fountain_of_Wealth

    The Fountain of Wealth at Suntec City, Singapore Overview Fountain of Wealth. The Fountain of Wealth (Malay: Air Pancut Kekayaan, Chinese: 财富之泉) is listed by the Guinness Book of Records in 1998 as the largest fountain in the world. [1] It is located in one of Singapore's largest shopping malls, Suntec City.

  8. One Raffles Place - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One_Raffles_Place

    The 280 m (920 ft) tall Tower One and the 38-storey Tower Two house offices, while the podium contains retail space. Initially conceived in the late 1970s as Overseas Union Bank Centre, the headquarters of Overseas Union Bank (OUB), work on the building began in 1981, while construction of the superstructure subsequently commenced in October 1984.

  9. The Centrepoint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Centrepoint

    The shopping mall underwent a makeover in 1991 and the first cost $4 million. The Centrepoint's management committee at the time carried out a survey to find out what customers wanted, and top on the wish list was better toilets. The toilets were fitted with automatic flushing systems and renovation works were carried out at night.