Five on Friday: 5 national monuments in Singapore that may surprise you

Five on Friday: 5 national monuments in Singapore that may surprise you

OLDER HILL STREET POLICE STATION

You might understand the  Old Slope Street Police Train station as the  rainbow-coloured building near Clarke Quay. Or you nevertheless call it the MICA Building.

With 927 windows painted in the colours of the rainbow, you might be forgiven for thinking that house consists entirely associated with windows.

Gazetted as a national monument in 1998, it had been once home towards the then  Ministry info, Communications and the Artistry.

The six-storey building opened in 1934 to serve as a police station and accommodation  meant for officers and their families.

When it was first built, the building got apartments for the Euro inspectors that were similar to our modern day penthouses.

These high-class flats were among the best in Singapore, every with two sleeping rooms, two toilets, the dining and family room, pantry, kitchen, servants’ quarters and verandahs.

As the Older Hill Street Law enforcement Station was when the largest of its kind in Malaya, it was then nicknamed the particular ‘police skyscraper’, which perhaps reveals just how low our requirements were – actually – for skyscraping back then.

MASJID JAMAE