Marina City Park

Marina City Park was a park in Singapore formerly located at Marina South, with entrances at Marina Boulevard and Marina Park. It is about 26.2 ha. Standing on reclaimed land, this park was planned to be a premier park of Singapore's proposed "city of the 21st century", as part of Singapore's vision to be a "City in a Garden". The park was closed on 1 June 2007 to make way for the Gardens by the Bay.

Marina City Park
Former location in Singapore
LocationMarina South Singapore
Coordinates
Area26.2 hectares (262,000 m2)
Opened30 December 1990 (1990-12-30)
Closed1 June 2007 (2007-06-01)
StatusDemolished

Features

Officially opened in 30 December 1990 by the then Minister of Labour Lee Yock Suan on the reclaimed land known as Marina South, the park has a two-tiered large pond with a fountain known as The Spirit of the Sculptural Fountain which could sprouted water up 18 metres high.[1] From the series of waterfront terraces besides the pond, one will get an enchanting view of the greenery on the islands in the pond. There are three large open spaces where major events can be held.

Sculptures are also found here, ranging from contemporary ones such as Soaring Vision, Spirit of Youth, and Sculptural Fountain to historical ones like the 12 Chinese Legendary Heroes.

The Constellation Plaza helped to trace the constellation during the evenings. The Sundial Plaza at the seafront facing the Promenade is installed for the young to learn how to tell time.

There used to be a sandy playground at the southern end of the park, but the former has been demolished to make way for new construction works.[2]

Closure

Marina City Park was closed from 1 June 2007 for the Gardens by the Bay's site preparatory works.[3]

  1. "The Official Opening of the Marina City Park and Unveiling …". www.nas.gov.sg. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20061109123510/http://www.nparks.gov.sg/park19.asp National Parks Board, Singapore - Marina City Park
  3. "Start of Site Preparatory Works for Gardens by the Bay". National Parks Board. Retrieved 2018-12-18.
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