Singapore Sports Hub

Singapore Sports Hub
新加坡体育城
Hab Sukan Singapura
சிங்கப்பூர் விளையாட்டு மையம்

The National Stadium
from the Sports Hub Boardwalk
Location Kallang, Singapore
Public transit  CC6  Stadium
 EW10  Kallang
 TE23  Tanjong Rhu (from 2023)
Owner Singapore Sports Hub Consortium
Operator Dragages Singapore Pte Ltd
Capacity National Stadium: 55,000
Singapore Indoor Stadium: 12,000
Aquatics Centre: 6,000
Multi-sport Arena: 3,000
41,000 square metres of commercial pace and supporting leisure and commercial developments.
Construction
Broke ground 29 September 2010
Opened 30 June 2014 (Soft Opening)
26 July 2015 (Official Opening)
Construction cost S$1.3 billion est.
Architect Arup Sport (Sports Venues), DP Architects (Non-Sport Venues, QP), AECOM (landscape)

The Singapore Sports Hub (Chinese: 新加坡体育城; Malay: Hab Sukan Singapura; Tamil: சிங்கப்பூர் விளையாட்டு மையம்) is a state-of-the-art, fully integrated sports, entertainment and lifestyle hub that was built in 2014 and hosts sporting and entertainment events. It replaced the former National Stadium on the recommendation of then Community Development and Sports Minister Abdullah Tarmugi in Parliament in 2001.[1] His proposal was based on a Committee on Sporting Singapore report [2] to promote a culture of sports in the city-state.

SportsHub Pte Ltd began construction with a groundbreaking ceremony on 29 September 2010 at Kallang,[3] before the former arena there was demolished. Served by the Stadium MRT Station, it was completed in June 2014 and, among others, rolled out a new 55,000-seat National Stadium with the largest dome roof in the world,[4][5] an aquatics centre, a multi-sport indoor arena and a water sports facility. The Sports Hub, which incorporated the older 12,000-seat Singapore Indoor Stadium, began operations on June 30 for the general public to start using its facilities.[6] Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong officially opened it 13 months later on July 26, 2015.[7]

The Rugby World Club 10s on 21–22 June 2014 was the first sporting event at the new national stadium.[8] The clash between Singapore and Juventus on 16 August 2014 was the first football game there.[9]

Since opening its doors, the Sports Hub has been a venue for major international, regional and local events. It has played host to the 2015 SEA Games, 2016 Singapore National Day Parade, WTA Finals, and superstars Madonna and Jay Chou.

Facilities

Singapore National Stadium from Kallang Footbridge
OCBC Aquatic Centre
Singapore Indoor Stadium
OCBC Arena
Skate Park
Beach Volleyball Area
Outdoor Basketball Court

The facilities at the new 35-hectare Sports Hub include:

Construction timeline

Demolition work on the existing National Stadium was slated to begin in 2008, however, the project has been delayed due to the financial crisis of 2007–2010 and high construction costs. The new Sports Hub was initially planned for completion in 2011 but was delayed. In 2008, it was mentioned that barring any major problems, the hub should be ready by 2013 when Singapore hosts the 27th Southeast Asian Games.[10] However, in 2009, further delays were announced.[11] In August 2010, it was officially announced that the contract to begin construction had been signed and that construction was finally moving forward with the National Stadium due to be demolished in October 2010 with the completion of the Sports Hub in April 2014. Demolition of the National Stadium started with a groundbreaking ceremony on 29 September, marking the official end of the Grand Old Dame.[12]

Bid process

Three finalist consortia (Singapore Gold Consortium, Alpine Mayreder, Singapore Sports Hub Consortium) submitted their plans in Feb 2007.[13][14]

On 19 January 2008, the Singapore government awarded the development of the Sports Hub project to Singapore Sports Hub Consortium (SSHC), led by Dragages Singapore Pte Ltd.[15]

During the announcement of the successful bidder at a press conference, the minister of Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports, Dr Vivian Balakrishnan said,

"The Consortium displayed significant strengths in programming, team culture and partnership, functionality and layout. It also offered the best value for money solution for Singapore."[16]

Usage

Concerts

Concerts at the Singapore Indoor Stadium

Concerts at the Singapore National Stadium

Sports

See also

References

  1. "Newspaper Article - State-of-the-art sports hub in the offing, says Mr Abdullah". eresources.nlb.gov.sg. Retrieved 2016-08-24.
  2. "Report of the Committee of Sporting Singapore". Ministry of Community Development and Sports, Singapore. July 2001.
  3. "Singapore Sports Hub - Marking A New Chapter Of A Sporting Singapore". Sport Singapore. Retrieved 2016-08-24.
  4. migration (2014-02-26). "Under one roof: Take a sneak peek at the Singapore Sports Hub". Retrieved 2016-08-24.
  5. "World's largest dome roof under construction". Arup. Retrieved 25 August 2016.
  6. Low, Lin Fhoong (12 June 2014). "Free access for a month". Retrieved 25 August 2016.
  7. hermesauto (2015-07-26). "PM marks Youth Day, opens Sports Hub in front of 50,000 crowd". Retrieved 2016-08-24.
  8. "New National Stadium opens its doors as it hosts the Rugby World Club 10s". Retrieved 2016-08-24.
  9. Chua, Siang Yee (16 August 2014). "Football: Juventus beat S'pore Selection 5-0 in friendly at new National Stadium". The Straits Times. Retrieved 24 August 2016 via www.asiaone.com.
  10. "Sports Hub may now be ready only by 2012". The Straits Times. 17 June 2008.
  11. "S'pore may not host 2013 SEA Games due to Sports Hub delay". Channel NewsAsia. 30 September 2009.
  12. "Finally, groundbreaking ceremony for Sports Hub". Channel NewsAsia. 29 September 2010.
  13. Cheney, Satish (28 March 2007). "All 3 proposals for the new Sports Hub are 'truly spectacular': Vivian Balakrishnan". Channel NewsAsia.
  14. Singh, Patwant (5 November 2007). "Final race begins on proposals for Singapore Sports Hub". Channel NewsAsia.
  15. "'Cool Dome' design wins Singapore Sports Hub project". Channel NewsAsia. 19 January 2008.
  16. "Singapore Sports Hub Consortium, Led By Dragages Singapore Pte Ltd, Selected as Preferred Bidder For Sports Hub Project". Singapore Sports Council. 19 January 2008.
  17. "2015 SEA Games in Singapore to be held from 5 to 16 June". Channel NewsAsia. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
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Coordinates: 1°18′15.4″N 103°52′28.6″E / 1.304278°N 103.874611°E / 1.304278; 103.874611

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