Sunday, 12 May 2013

The Fuk Tak Chi temple

I got lost near Raffles Place the other day, and stumbled across this place on Telok Ayer Street. We're pretty much in the financial district here, so I was a bit surprised to find this. It's a temple, built in the 1820's (pretty aged for Singapore!) and then restored in 1997.


The original temple was built as a group effort from the Cantonese and Hakka communities in Singapore at the time, to honour the Malaysian Chinese deity Tua Peh Kong, who protects against danger and illness. It has seen various upgrades over the years.

Apparently a portion of the current financial district sits on land reclaimed in the 1880s from the old seafront, which used to be right by this temple (Telok Ayer 'telok eye' means water bay in Malay). What I rather enjoyed about the visit was also the fab, detailed model of what the original area would have been like - complete with traders, fruit-sellers, people playing cards and having a shave!

Suspect Blogger will upload all these photos weirdly, but you can click on them for a slideshow!


 

 

Wednesday, 1 May 2013

Hot cross buns: Singapore seating arrangements

The bus stops in our area in Singapore all have this seating design. Quite comfortable during evenings, as they are wide and you don't slide off. (They don't have problems with drunks and junkies hanging at bus stops in this country!) But when it gets very hot midday, these seats can become a veritable teppan for your cheeks! (Even wearing clothes.)

You have been warned.

SSsssizzzling! The Singapore bus stop.


* (Teppan is the Japanese flat steel griddle-pan used for cooking Teppanyaki.)