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One of the bays in Singapore |
Today I woke up and still couldn't get the water warm, so I went back to bed to read until Randy and Joshua woke up. Well, they slept in even much later than I did! I had Randy watch me turn on the water to see what my problem was. Well, the water is backwards--you have to turn it to the right where the blue is instead of the left where the red mark is. I had tried that, but evidently didn't hold it there long enough. So we decided to split up today. Joshua and I wanted to go to the History Museum, so Randy went to a part of town where he wanted to take photos. The History Museum of Singapore isn't as glitzy as the History Museum of Hong Kong and only started in the 14th century instead of 400,000,000 years ago, but it was really good. I felt that I had a much better handle on the history at the end. And of course I had my history nerd with me to answer any questions that I had! The museum focused on the settling of the area, and the meaning of the name Singapura which is its Malay name. It is from the sanskrit "lion city" because a Sumatran Prince went there and saw what he believed to be a lion and named it Singapura (instead of its old name, Temasek). Then there was a lot about the colonization by Great Britain, then the occupation by Japan (that was a black time including Japan's persecution of the Chinese), then the withdrawal of Great Britain, the alliance with Malaysia, then the separation from Malaysia. The head of state actually cried about how the separation was handled. Then about the creation of the country (city-state) of Singapore. That is why the city seems somewhat Disneyesque, I think. It reminds me of Tomorrowland, of Disney World. Very well planned and orderly and supremely clean and polite. They even have red and green lines and arrows to show you where to wait and where to alight from each subway car. There are lanes for walking each way marked at the airport and in the MRT stations. No one crosses the street until the green walking figure lights up. The country all came together and created a planned community. They planted trees to become a garden city (they have a tree planting day every year), they planned communities of homes so that everyone had an affordable home and that many people could eventually buy their homes. Each group of homes had a business area with shops. They introduced family planning. Then they thoughtfully planned industrialization and investment by foreign companies to grow the economy. Sounds like a Republican's nightmare! Every worker's wages doubled and the number of women in the workforce in the 70s tripled! So far, I haven't seen a beggar, a slum, or a homeless person.
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The museum |
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A ship exploring |
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A rickshaw |
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Japanese occupation |
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They had these Quiet Spots spread out in the museum--maybe for people
with sensory processing issues or anxiety? |
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Modern (1970s) apartments |
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Social engineering |
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Creating a Garden City |
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Becoming a Global City |
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Art installation |
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These are in the subway. This is Stand up Stacy, then there's
Move to the Middle Melvin, and Bags on the Floor Benny. |
Another part of the museum was the Story of the Forest. Starting on the second floor, first you go into a dome room with flowers falling from the sky, and it smells like flowers. Then you follow a path with a moving woodland scene happening. Then another dome with flowers falling from the sky and woodland scenes on the side walls. There are huge cushions on the floor, so Joshua and I laid down to watch it. It was very soothing.
Because it was just the two of us, Joshua and I spent a long time at the museum (and we didn't even get to see the exhibits on life in Singapore on the second floor). Then we found an Asian food foodcourt for dinner before meeting up with Randy at the Marina Bay Sands Hotel.
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Huge tree--Joshua is in front for size comarison |
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The front part of the museum |
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Dinner. Joshua tried sushi and I had orange chicken with rice (and an egg).
The chicken was crunchy and had chunks of orange rind in it and was very good.
Joshua wasn't a fan of the sushi and we had to go get a sandwich for his dinner. |
You can buy a pass to go up to the observation deck of the Marina Bay Sands Hotel (the one from the movie). By the time we were up there, it was getting dark. We saw the hotel's light show, then went to the other side and waited 5 minutes to see the Gardens by the Bay's light show. They were both rather uninspiring. The Garden's was too far for us to hear the music and the hotels' was too slow. But it was beautiful up there. They have millions of tons of soil there for the plants and millions of liters of water for the pool (we weren't allowed to see those from the observation deck). Joshua checked out room prices--$500 per night for a typical room and $6000 per night for the suites!
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From the observation deck |
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The light show |
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The Gardens by the Bay |
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The Gardens' light show |
Then back to our apartment. I'm ready for bed! Joshua just showed me some video of the violent riots in Hong Kong and how they broke into the government building. Scary--glad we missed that!
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