Sengkang Sports and Recreation Centre

Sengkang Sports and Recreation Centre
Location Anchorvale, Sengkang, Singapore
Broke ground 2 April 2006
Opened 1 August 2008
Owner People's Association, Singapore Sports Council
Operator People's Association, Singapore Sports Council
Construction cost S$48.7 million
Architect LT & T Architects
Capacity 200 (indoor arena)

Sengkang Sports and Recreation Centre (Chinese: 盛港体育休闲中心; pinyin: Shènggǎng tǐyù xiūxián zhōngxīn), formally known as Sengkang Sports Complex, is a sports complex in Anchorvale of Sengkang New Town, Singapore. It was scheduled to open in end 2007[1], but the inauguration has been delayed until mid-late 2008.[2][3]

Contents

History

Sengkang Sports and Recreation Centre was built as part of a plan to improve amenities in Pasir Ris-Punggol Group Representation Constituency and Sengkang New Town, costing S$1 billion.[4][5] The People's Association and Singapore Sports Council were involved in the planning of the sports complex, and went ahead with the project despite Singapore's economic recession in the early 2000s. Fund raising campaigns were initiated by grassroots leaders to support the construction of the complex.

Although the sports complex was originally planned to be ready by 2004[6], construction began only in 2006. On 2 April 2006, the groundbreaking ceremony for the Sengkang Sports and Recreation Centre was held, attended by Member of Parliament for Ang Mo Kio Group Representation Constituency Wee Siew Kim. The S$48.7 million[7] complex was designed by architectural firm LT & T Architects[8], and will be completed by end 2007.[1]

Facilities

Situated on 4 hectares of land beside Sungei Punggol, Sengkang Sports and Recreation Centre houses a community club, and feature sports facilities including four swimming pools, five water slides one of the slides have four colours similar to the slides at East Coast Park which is now closed. It also has an indoor sports hall and a synthetic soccer field occupying 12,000 square metres (129,170 square feet).[1][9]

The four-storey Anchorvale Community Club is the first community centre in Singapore to be built next to a river and co-located with a sports complex. The available facilities include a multi-media room, a tea arts room, playrooms, a large multi-purpose hall, a reading and study area, and a roof terrace. There are also space for retail, a riverfront café and eating outlets.

The indoor sports hall will be able to accommodate 12 badminton courts, and can also be used for basketball and volleyball. Retractable seating, which allows flexible use of the hall, can seat 200 spectators. Other indoor facilities include a dance studio and a gymnasium.

The sports complex will be linked to an artificial island on the future Punggol Reservoir for people to take part in water sports and activities.[9] A park connector, which is a continuous landscaped pavement for pedestrians and cyclists, will run beside the river bank, connecting all the facilities. The Anchorvale Community Club has adopted Sungei Punggol under the Ministry of the Environment and Water Resources' and Public Utilities Board's Active, Beautiful and Clean (ABC) Waters Programme, and takes the lead in protecting the natural environment of the river.[1]

The public swimming pools in the Sengkang Sports and Recreation Centre has started operation from 1 August 2008.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d "Transcript of Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s National Day Rally English Speech on 19 August 2007 at NUS University Cultural Centre". Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts (Singapore). 2007-08-19. http://app.sprinter.gov.sg/data/pr/2007081907.htm. Retrieved 2007-08-27. 
  2. ^ (News) Wrong date, false hopes - VR-Zone IT & Lifestyle Forum!
  3. ^ Sengkang West sports centre almost ready
  4. ^ Tee Hun Ching (19 March 2006). "It's sports galore in $1b plan for Pasir Ris-Punggol". The Sunday Times. p. 5. 
  5. ^ Sim Chi Yin (26 April 2006). "The pool factor: Public pools are in demand by heartlanders, a fact not lost on MPs". The Straits Times. 
  6. ^ Cindy Lim (11 April 2000). "Slow start in Sengkang". The Straits Times. p. 40. 
  7. ^ "Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports" (pdf). Ministry of Finance (Singapore). Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. http://web.archive.org/web/20070927215707/http://internet-stg.mof.gov.sg/budget_2005/expenditure_estimates/attachment/MCYS_EE2005.pdf. Retrieved 2007-08-26. 
  8. ^ "List of eNPQS Users" (pdf). Building and Construction Authority. http://www.corenet.gov.sg/enpqs/doc/npqs-users.pdf. Retrieved 2007-08-26. 
  9. ^ a b Lynn Lee (20 August 2007). "Punggol 21 reborn - and jazzed up as well". The Straits Times. p. H5. 

References

External links

Sengkang room facility