The Marina Bay Sands with the Helix pedestrian bridge left, the ArtScience museum on the right and the curving, cantilevered Skypark atop the three towers of the Sands Hotel |
The Singapore Flyer as seen from the Skypark |
View of the Singapore Strait and ongoing construction below |
The durian-shaped Singapore Convention Center |
Looking down on the bay and the ArtScience Museum |
The Skypark is definitely not for the altophobic |
The Central Business District and beyond |
The ArtScience Museum |
The Merlion seen from 57 stories up |
The Marina Bay Sands in Singapore, designed by Israeli-born architect Moshe Safdie was initially inspired by a deck of cards. This astonishing complex, said to be the most expensive stand alone casino costing US$8 billion, is a blend of glass and steel curving along impossible lines. It was a challenging project according to its engineers and builders. Three 57-storey towers of the Sands Hotel is joined together by a rooftop structure called the Skypark. It has a cantilevered deck jutting out 64 meters from one tower, and the largest–longest–highest infinity pool with an edge "vanishing" into the Singapore skyline and beyond. It has a restaurant and bar offering a vertiginous view of the bay on one side and the Strait of Singapore on the other. The 20 hectare property includes the ArtScience museum (shaped like a lotus flower), the Shoppes, the Glass Pavillions and the Sands Hotel and the 4-storey Casino. There is also the Helix Bridge, a pedestrian walkway linking the Marina Centre with Marina Bay Sands.
The Shoppes is a mall of high end stores and gastronomic restaurants of superstar chefs like Mario Batalli and Daniel Bouloud. It also features a large skating rink of fake ice and sampan rides in a Venitian-like canal snaking its way around the shops. It's centerpiece, the Rain Oculus, created by American artist and sculptor Ned Kahn, has water bursting forth from an acrylic basket in the ceiling, gushing down into a rotunda in the waterway.
Peppered throughout the Marina Bay Sands complex are remarkable pieces of modern art, a visual feast for guests and the casual visitor. An ongoing exhibit at the ArtScience museum is a fairly comprehensive retrospective of Salvador Dali's works. There are Broadway musicals like The Lion King, Cirque Elóise and Rahman's Jai Ho showing in various theatres.
There are two yet to be completed crystal pavilions that will house the largest Louis Vuitton boutique in the world and two world famous night clubs, the Avalon and Pangea. The structures are on a floating island and connected by an underwater tunnel.
Overall, if one is allowed to proselytize, this temple to hedonism does its job in spectacular fashion. It indulges the senses in all ways possible. From the distinctive hotel, plush casino, luxury brand stores, gourmet restaurants, shows and attractions—all are designed to bedazzle, and entice you to part with your hard earned cash without really feeling it. The ancient art of smoke and mirrors, with the aid of technology, is now a science and cleverly employed in this breathtaking, 21st century resort.
The Shoppes is a mall of high end stores and gastronomic restaurants of superstar chefs like Mario Batalli and Daniel Bouloud. It also features a large skating rink of fake ice and sampan rides in a Venitian-like canal snaking its way around the shops. It's centerpiece, the Rain Oculus, created by American artist and sculptor Ned Kahn, has water bursting forth from an acrylic basket in the ceiling, gushing down into a rotunda in the waterway.
Peppered throughout the Marina Bay Sands complex are remarkable pieces of modern art, a visual feast for guests and the casual visitor. An ongoing exhibit at the ArtScience museum is a fairly comprehensive retrospective of Salvador Dali's works. There are Broadway musicals like The Lion King, Cirque Elóise and Rahman's Jai Ho showing in various theatres.
There are two yet to be completed crystal pavilions that will house the largest Louis Vuitton boutique in the world and two world famous night clubs, the Avalon and Pangea. The structures are on a floating island and connected by an underwater tunnel.
Overall, if one is allowed to proselytize, this temple to hedonism does its job in spectacular fashion. It indulges the senses in all ways possible. From the distinctive hotel, plush casino, luxury brand stores, gourmet restaurants, shows and attractions—all are designed to bedazzle, and entice you to part with your hard earned cash without really feeling it. The ancient art of smoke and mirrors, with the aid of technology, is now a science and cleverly employed in this breathtaking, 21st century resort.
Getting damp in a sampan by the rain oculus |
Skating on fake ice |
ArtScience Museum closeup |
Not too many straight lines here |
Inside the glass awning of The Shoppes |
Sculpture dotting the shopping mall |
3 comments:
Remarkable pictures. It is hard to believe that a casino resort complex can evolve into an architectural wonder! Even more unbelievable is that this photographic odyssey was undertaken in a seemingly very ordinary city like Singapore - great job Mimi.
thanks apg! singapore has developed into a dynamic city although i would still be hard pressed to call it exciting. its once staid reputation has run its course and it's now well on its way to becoming a 21st century, cutting edge metropolis
WOW!
Post a Comment