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Getting Around Singapore Guide

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Getting Around Singapore Guide


Typical Singapore MRT train passing through a housing estate

Click here for a large map (80kb, 2400×2100)

Getting around Singapore is effortless: the public transportation system is among the best in the world and taxis are cheap. Very few visitors rent cars.

If you are staying in Singapore for some time, a farecard called ez-link might be a worthwhile purchase. You can store value on it and use it to enter and exit the MRT and buses at a 15% discount, and you get a 25 cent discount on transfers too. The card costs $15, including $7 of stored value and a $3 refundable deposit, and the card can be “topped up” in increments of at least $10 at the farecard vending machines or at the numerous 7-Eleven’s in the city). Alternatively, the Visitors Card also includes ez-link card functionality and a variety of discounts for attractions; prices start at $45 for 3 days.

Besides the popular methods of taking the public buses (Singapore public bus guide), MRTs (Singapore MRT train guide) and taxis (Singapore taxi guide), there are some other methods listed below that you can try out:


By trishaw

Trishaws, three-wheeled bicycle taxis, haunt the area around the Singapore River and Chinatown. Geared purely for tourists, they aren’t really recommended for serious travel and locals do not use them. There is little room for bargaining: short rides will cost $10-20 and an hour’s sightseeing charter about $50 per person.

By boat

Tourist-oriented bumboats cruise the Singapore River, offering nice views of the CBD skyscraper skyline. You can also take a ferry to Singapore’s largely uninhabited Southern Islands for a picnic and lagoon swimming.

There is also a boat shuttle passengers from Changi Village to Pulau Ubin, a small island off Singapore’s northeast coast which is about as close as Singapore gets to unhurried rural living. One can rent bikes to cycle around the island which has a number of disused granite quarries.

By car

Car rental is not a popular option in Singapore. You will usually be looking at upwards for $100 per day for the smallest vehicle, not including gas at around $1.50/litre or electronic road pricing (ERP) fees, and you’ll usually need to pay extra to drive to Malaysia.

If planning on touring Malaysia by car, it makes more sense to head across the border to Johor Bahru, where both rentals and petrol are half price, and you have the option of dropping your car off elsewhere in the country. Take note that if you do intend to rent a car, be sure to drive on the left side of the road (Singapore follows the UK road system), and reading up a bit on road regulations helps too.

On foot

Singapore is almost certainly the most pedestrian-friendly city in southeast Asia. Sidewalks and pedestrian crossings are in good shape and plentiful, roads are well signposted and drivers are usually very careful — by law, any accident between a pedestrian and a vehicle is presumed to be the driver’s fault. Classic walks in Singapore include walking down the river from the Merlion through the Quays, or just strolling around East Coast Park, Chinatown, Little India or Bugis.

The one unavoidable downside, though, is the tropical heat and humidity, which leaves many visitors sweaty and exhausted. Therefore, bringing along a packet of tissue or a handkerchief is recommended. Having a bottle of water with you also helps.

It’s best to get an early start, pop into air-conditioned shops, cafes, and museums to cool off, and plan on heading back to the shopping mall or hotel pool before noon. Alternatively, after sundown, evenings can also be comparatively cool and breezy, especially by the river.

Article licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 1.0. A list of contributors is available at the original article on Wikitravel.

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Singapore Sentosa Travel Guide

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Singapore Sentosa Travel Guide


Sentosa is an island in the south of Singapore, and is one place very popular with tourists and locals alike.

Cable cars to Sentosa

You can get to Sentosa by walking, cycling or driving across, or by taking the free shuttle bus, or by cable car. Cable car rides cost around $10 per person for a normal cabin, and slightly more for a glass-bottomed one that allows you to look below you as you move through the air.

The admission fee to Sentosa is already included in the price of the cable car ticket, but for the other means, you’ll need to pay around $3 per person at the visitors’ centre before you can enter Sentosa.

View from a tower in Sentosa

Once there, you’ll want to visit the various attractions and historical sites. Must-sees are the giant Merlion statue, musical fountains, underwater world and historical museums.

Other than that, there’re also the beautiful beaches, where you can get a nice tan, just enjoy the sound of the waves, or play games like volleyball and frisbee.

Sentosa Luge Ride

Newer attractions include the Luge, which will see you zipping down a 65m downhill track in gravity-propelled three-wheel cart, for around $8 per trip. Originated from New Zealand, the non-motorised cart is tons of fun, and a ski-lift brings you to the top, where you cart your way to Siloso Beach at the end of the track.

Rasa Sentosa Resort

If there are too many things to see in a day – which is very likely – you can opt to spend a night in a hostel, or a upclass beachfront hotel, the Shangri-La’s Rasa Sentosa Resort. Want to be pampered in style? Get great savings when you use our Singapore hotel room deals!

There are four hotels in Sentosa:

  • Shangri-La’s Rasa Sentosa is a beachfront five-star hotel located at the western tip of Siloso beach, with 459 rooms and suites.
  • The Sentosa Resort & Spa is a five-star hotel with 214 rooms and suites. The hotel’s Spa Botanica has facilities including mud pools and Turkish-styled steam baths.
  • Costa Sands Resort operates a number of chalets and 15 kampung-like huts. It is located on a hill overlooking Siloso Beach.
  • Sijori Resort is a 64 room hotel located behind the Merlion together with the Sijori WonderGolf facility.

To save some money, use our online hotel room tool to get you the best rates for these hotels.

Attractions

Underwater World: Sentosa Island’s biggest attraction is Underwater World, a tropical oceanarium where visitors can get a close look at over 2500 marine creatures from 250 species, including bamboo sharks, moray eels, stingrays, sea dragons turtles and the playful marine mammals of Dolphin Lagoon.

Enjoy the show at Dolphin Lagoon (included in the Underwater World ticket) as trainers bring the Indo-Pacific Humpback Dolphins through a series of interactive, feeding and training sessions. There might even be the chance to wade next to them, supervised by the trainers.

Butterfly Park/Insect Museum: This museum houses nearly 2500 butterflies and 3000 species of insects. Light up your day with a visit to the Insect Kingdom where you’ll be dazzled by the luminance of 5000 fireflies.

Volcano Land: This multi-sensory theme attraction takes you for a ride into the ancient Maya civilization and Mount Prospero, the world’s most active volcano. A “descent simulator” takes you right into the heart of the crater to experience an earth-shattering volcanic eruption. There are also outdoor performances and live entertainment at the stone ruins of the lost Mayan city.

Other excellent family attractions are the 37-metre tall statue of the mythical Merlion, and the incredible Musical Fountain – an extravaganza of lights, sound, water and video projection.

 

 

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