Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Traditional architecture in Singapore includes vernacular Malay houses, local hybrid shophouses and black and white bungalows, a range of places of worship reflecting the ethnic and religious diversity of the city-state as well as colonial civic and commercial architecture in European Neoclassical, gothic, palladian and renaissance styles.
The Gateway is a 37-storey, 150 m (490 ft), skyscraper complex completed in April 1990 on Beach Road in the Downtown Core of Singapore. The two buildings are named The Gateway East and The Gateway West. The embassy of Mexico is located on the 3rd floor of The Gateway East.
Overhangs on two sides of Pennsylvania Dutch barns protect doors, windows, and other lower-level structures. Overhangs on all four sides of barns and larger, older farmhouses are common in Swiss architecture. An overhanging eave is the edge of a roof, protruding outwards from the side of the building, generally to provide weather protection.
This is a list of buildings and structures in Singapore. See respective sections for more detailed lists. See respective sections for more detailed lists. Singapore from end to end
OCBC Centre was completed in 1976 and was the second-tallest building in the country, and South East Asia, at that time. [4] There are two extensions, OCBC Centre South and OCBC Centre East. There is an Executive Club on one of the higher floors of the building. OCBC Centre East has food and beverage outlets.
The Interlace's site formerly housed the 607 units Gillman Heights Condominium, which is 50 percent owned by the National University of Singapore (NUS). [6] The property was subsequently sold to CapitaLand through a collective sale but the sale was controversial as NUS held a 16 percent stake in Ankerite, a private fund that was a subsidiary of CapitaLand.
In “Razing Liberty Square,” tenants who were promised they could stay in Liberty City were instead given Section 8 vouchers to leave their long-time community roots and support behind.
Rank Name Image Height (m) Height (ft) Floors Year Coordinates Notes 1 Guoco Tower: 290 950 65 2016 The tallest building in Singapore since 2016. [12] Initially planned for 290 m, a permission had to be obtained to build it above the height limit of 280 m allowable for buildings in Singapore, Tallest building constructed in Singapore in the 2010s [13]