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HISTORIC DISTRICT ATTRACTIONS


City Hall (Municipal Building) During the Japanese occupation, City Hall was a major headquarters, and it was here in 1945 that Admiral Lord Louis Mountbatten accepted the Japanese surrender. In 1951, the Royal Proclamation from King George VI was read here declaring that Singapore would henceforth be known as a city. Fourteen years later, Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew announced to its citizens that Singapore would henceforth be called an independent republic.

City Hall, along with the Supreme Court, was judiciously sited to take full advantage of the prime location. Magnificent Corinthian columns march across the front of the symmetrically designed building, while inside, two courtyards lend an ambience of informality to otherwise officious surroundings. For all its magnificence and historical fame, however, its architect, F. D. Meadows, relied too heavilv on European influence. The many windows afford no protection from the sun, and the entrance leaves pedestrians unsheltered from the elements.

In defining the very nobility of the Singapore government, it appears the Singaporean climate wasn't taken into consideration. St. Andrew's Rd., across from the Padang. Entrance to the visitor's gallery is permitted, but all other areas are off-limits.

Empress Place Building Standing as a symbol of British colonial authority as travelers entered the Singapore River, Empress Place Building housed almost the entire government bureaucracy around the year 1905, and was a government office until the 1980s, housing the Registry of Births and Deaths and the Citizenship Registry. Every Singaporean at some point passed through its doors. In the late 1980s, the government offices moved out and the building was restored is an historical cultural exhibition venue.
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