Mustafa Centre is a shopping mall in Singapore, situated on Syed Alwi Road in the cultural district of Little India, within the planning area of Kallang. Within a walking distance from Farrer Park station and Jalan Besar station on the North East Line and Downtown Line, Mustafa Centre is a retail hub attracting many shoppers with its wide variety of products and services.
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197 m
Masjid Angullia
Masjid Angullia, also known as Angullia Mosque, is a mosque in Singapore. It is a recognisable landmark of the Little India district, and a key symbol of the Indian Muslim community.
The mosque was built on wakaf land donated by Gujarati businessman Mohamed Salleh Eusoofjee Angullia in 1890. Since 2014, the gatehouse of the original building has been gazetted as a Conserved Building by the Urban Redevelopment Authority of Singapore. Today, the mosque is frequented by Muslim workers and visitors of Little India as one of the two surviving mosques in the area, the other being Masjid Abdul Gaffoor.
229 m
City Square Mall
City Square Mall (Chinese: 城市广场; pinyin: Chéng Shì Guǎng Chǎng) is Singapore's first eco-mall to be integrated with a 49,000 sq ft (4,600 m2) urban park named City Green, located within the planning area of Kallang. The mall sits on the site of Singapore's historic New World Amusement Park and is directly connected to Farrer Park MRT station. City Green is designed to provide a learning experience about ecology and the natural environment.
City Square Mall is the first mall in Singapore awarded the Green Mark Platinum Award by the Building and Construction Authority (BCA).
It has a total of 9 floors, with 2 basements.
240 m
New World Amusement Park
The New World Amusement Park (Chinese: 新世界) was the first of three amusement parks, along with Great World (estd. early 1930s) and Gay World (estd. 1936), that wooed Malaya and Singapore night crowds from the 1920s to the 1960s. New World was a prominent landmark along Jalan Besar, in modern-day Kallang planning area, as it occupied a large area of 45,000 square feet (4,200 m2) in size. Before the arrival of televisions and radios, it attracted people from all walks of life from labourers to Europeans with its exciting attractions such as striptease, cabaret girls, opera shows and boxing matches during its heyday. Of all the artistes and athletes who have performed at the New World through the years, four have left a lasting impression – striptease queen Rose Chan, wrestler King Kong, strongman Mat Tarzan, and boxer Felix Boy. With the advent of shopping centres, discos and, particularly, television in the ensuing decades, the park business gradually became poor, and it was finally closed for good after being sold to a property developer for redevelopment in 1987.
253 m
Collapse of Hotel New World
The collapse of Hotel New World was a civil disaster that occurred in Singapore on 15 March 1986. The Hotel New World was a six-story building situated at the junction of Serangoon Road and Owen Road in the Rochor district when it suddenly collapsed, trapping 50 people beneath the rubble. 33 people died and 17 people were rescued.
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