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From Nicoll Highway, Golden Mile Complex, with its unique stepped terraced design, resembles a giant typewriter, 2023.
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Golden Mile Complex with its unique stepped terraced design as seen from Nicoll Highway, 2022. The building next to it is Golden Mile Tower. Photo by Darren Soh.
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HOW THE STREETS GOT THEIR NAMES
The housing committee met up with the Advisory Committee on the Naming of Roads and Streets and suggested that the roads in Teachers’ Estate be named after poets or people well-known in the education or literary fields.
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The housing committee met up with the Advisory Committee on the Naming of Roads and Streets and suggested that the roads in Teachers’ Estate be named after poets or people well-known in the education or literary fields.
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The roads in Teachers’ Housing Estate are named after famous writers and poets. Photo by Sharon Teng.
Munshi Abdullah Walk is named after Munshi Abdullah (1797–1854), the “Father of Modern Malay Literature”. He was a language teacher, interpreter and scribe who tutored Stamford Raffles in Malay. Photo by Sharon Teng.
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- Munshi Abdullah Avenue/Walk – Named after Munshi Abdullah (1797–1854), the “Father of Modern Malay Literature”. He was a language teacher, interpreter and scribe who tutored Stamford Raffles in Malay.
- Omar Khayyam Avenue – Named after Omar Khayyam (1048–1131), a Persian poet, astronomer and mathematician. He is best known as the author of the Rubaiyat, a verse form consisting of four-line stanzas.
- Kalidasa Avenue – Named after Kalidasa, one of the greatest poets and playwrights in India who lived around the 5th century.
- Tagore Avenue – Named after Rabindranath Tagore (1861–1941), a Bengali poet who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913 and was knighted in England in 1914.
- Iqbal Avenue – Named after the Indian poet and philosopher, Muhammad Iqbal (1877–1938), who was a staunch advocate for the creation of a separate Muslim state.
- Tu Fu Avenue – Named after Du Fu (712–770), one of the greatest poets and social critics in Chinese history.
- Li Po Avenue – Named after the renowned Chinese poet, Li Po (701–762) (also known as Li Bai), who lived during the Tang Dynasty.
- Tung Po Avenue – Named after Su Shi (1037–1101) (also known by his pseudonym Su Tung Po), a poet, essayist, artist and public official who lived during the Song Dynasty.
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HOW THE STREETS GOT THEIR NAMES
The housing committee met up with the Advisory Committee on the Naming of Roads and Streets and suggested that the roads in Teachers’ Estate be named after poets or people well-known in the education or literary fields.
Hyperlink here: (see coding below) Reclamation at Sentosa Island
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The housing committee met up with the Advisory Committee on the Naming of Roads and Streets and suggested that the roads in Teachers’ Estate be named after poets or people well-known in the education or literary fields.
Hyperlink here: (see coding below) Reclamation at Sentosa Island
****Changing text box size and/or Font size****
Introduction
HOW THE STREETS GOT THEIR NAMES