With underground city, sinkapore can take in more PATAN

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New Acronym: PATAN = Pinoys, Ah Tiong and Ah Nehs

Govt considering underground masterplan: Khaw

Daryl Chin Property Correspondent
The Straits Times
Friday, Sep 06, 2013

SINGAPORE - AN UNDERGROUND city with shopping malls, research facilities and even cycling lanes.

This is worth exploring to make Singapore "even more exciting and liveable", said National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan on his blog on Tuesday, suggesting that the Government is considering an "underground" masterplan.

The current land use masterplan, last reviewed in 2008, sets out how much needs to be built to efficiently spread the population across the island.

"We are currently in the midst of updating our master- plan... In parallel, we are thinking about the possibility of developing an underground equivalent... to see how practical underground plans can complement the above-ground masterplan," revealed the minister.

Although expanding underground will be expensive compared with building on the surface, "we can try to push the boundary of usage - to experiment, to learn and to evolve practical, innovative solutions - so as to prepare for the future", he added.

Building underground is not a new concept here.

Already, about 12km of expressways and nearly 80km of train lines are below the surface. Once completed, Jurong Island's Rock Cavern, located at a depth of 130m, will also become Southeast Asia's first underground petrochemicals storage facility.

But Mr Khaw believes there is scope to do more, pointing to other cities which have exploited subterranean spaces well.

Montreal's underground city Reso, which is used by 500,000 people daily, has offices, hotels, cinemas and even universities. And in Scandinavia, swimming complexes and even concert halls and churches have been built underground.

With Singapore's population projected to grow from the current 5.3 million to more than six million by 2030 according to a recent White Paper, experts believe building downwards is a viable alternative.

This is especially since parts of Singapore, like Bukit Timah, are blessed with a foundation of hard rocks such as granite, which provides the needed structural support for underground structures, explained Mr Chong Kee Sen, vice-president of the Institution of Engineers.

He said building beneath the surface "essentially doubles the space you can have for development".

But the studies that are needed to see if a massive underground project is feasible, and the construction time involved, mean that any subterranean solution will take at least 20 years to see the light.

In his blog, Mr Khaw said the Government will not rush into going underground.

He added: "We will also not be able to formulate a comprehensive underground masterplan in our initial attempt. But the earlier we begin, the faster we will learn and the easier it would be for us to realise these plans."

[email protected]
 
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Soon, there will be multi-layer of cities on our island. The surface will be for the elites and the angmos. The first level underground will be for the PATAN. Sinkees will be pushed down to the second level beneath ground, befitting how we are treated in our own country by the PAP and PATANs.
 
I wonder if anyone here heard of the Morlocks? They're an underground dwelling humanoid descendant species in H.G.Wells, The Time Machine. Kind of scary.

Cheers!
 
They couldn't even build Nicoll Highway properly, good luck to those living 'down under'! :rolleyes:
 
Soon, there will be multi-layer of cities on our island. The surface will be for the elites and the angmos. The first level underground will be for the PATAN. Sinkees will be pushed down to the second level beneath ground, befitting how we are treated in our own country by the PAP and PATANs.

Or, in the unlikely case of a nuclear fallout, the reverse happens: the elites get bunkered underground, as for the the surface-dwelling serfs... same old story, the motto of the PAP 'you die is your business'. :cool:
 
Bye bye it's time to move on.
marching-band.gif
 
I wonder if anyone here heard of the Morlocks? They're an underground dwelling humanoid descendant species in H.G.Wells, The Time Machine. Kind of scary ...
dey shud send a tim 2 new mexico 2 study how dey build dulce ...
 
Since when it rain it ponded. Why not use this ponding natural resource to build a ponding city.

Soon, there will be multi-layer of cities on our island. The surface will be for the elites and the angmos. The first level underground will be for the PATAN. Sinkees will be pushed down to the second level beneath ground, befitting how we are treated in our own country by the PAP and PATANs.
 
Xiao boh! now they want you to share hell spaces with the Gate of Hell cities. Soon they have to print Hell Notes to use underground.



Soon, there will be multi-layer of cities on our island. The surface will be for the elites and the angmos. The first level underground will be for the PATAN. Sinkees will be pushed down to the second level beneath ground, befitting how we are treated in our own country by the PAP and PATANs.
 
Your underground city will become underwater world in "once every 50 years".
 
New Acronym: PATAN = Pinoys, Ah Tiong and Ah Nehs

Govt considering underground masterplan: Khaw

Daryl Chin Property Correspondent
The Straits Times
Friday, Sep 06, 2013

SINGAPORE - AN UNDERGROUND city with shopping malls, research facilities and even cycling lanes.

This is worth exploring to make Singapore "even more exciting and liveable", said National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan on his blog on Tuesday, suggesting that the Government is considering an "underground" masterplan.

The current land use masterplan, last reviewed in 2008, sets out how much needs to be built to efficiently spread the population across the island.

"We are currently in the midst of updating our master- plan... In parallel, we are thinking about the possibility of developing an underground equivalent... to see how practical underground plans can complement the above-ground masterplan," revealed the minister.

Although expanding underground will be expensive compared with building on the surface, "we can try to push the boundary of usage - to experiment, to learn and to evolve practical, innovative solutions - so as to prepare for the future", he added.

Building underground is not a new concept here.

Already, about 12km of expressways and nearly 80km of train lines are below the surface. Once completed, Jurong Island's Rock Cavern, located at a depth of 130m, will also become Southeast Asia's first underground petrochemicals storage facility.

But Mr Khaw believes there is scope to do more, pointing to other cities which have exploited subterranean spaces well.

Montreal's underground city Reso, which is used by 500,000 people daily, has offices, hotels, cinemas and even universities. And in Scandinavia, swimming complexes and even concert halls and churches have been built underground.

With Singapore's population projected to grow from the current 5.3 million to more than six million by 2030 according to a recent White Paper, experts believe building downwards is a viable alternative.

This is especially since parts of Singapore, like Bukit Timah, are blessed with a foundation of hard rocks such as granite, which provides the needed structural support for underground structures, explained Mr Chong Kee Sen, vice-president of the Institution of Engineers.

He said building beneath the surface "essentially doubles the space you can have for development".

But the studies that are needed to see if a massive underground project is feasible, and the construction time involved, mean that any subterranean solution will take at least 20 years to see the light.

In his blog, Mr Khaw said the Government will not rush into going underground.

He added: "We will also not be able to formulate a comprehensive underground masterplan in our initial attempt. But the earlier we begin, the faster we will learn and the easier it would be for us to realise these plans."

[email protected]

This is a brilliant idea. And our leaders should, well, lead. There is no better way to get traction for this idea than to show by example. I think we should move the House of Parliament there first. Then, gradually , all government offices. After that , empty the Istana and find a suitable home for the presidency some sixty feet under.
 
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