Having accepted the invite to the media preview of the new heritage tour by My Community, I made my way to Holland Village MRT Station on a Sunday morning to catch the group of "media folks" assembling at 8.15am for the tour. As a first-time participant of their heritage tour, I was given a copy of their "My Queenstown Heritage Trail" booklet which I'm told would be revised soon. By the way you can download the booklet and other publications on My Community's page. All participants were handed bottled water. While the tour took place mostly within
What's unusual is that we were also handed this red compact multi-channel wireless receiver, complete with lanyard and earpiece. No prize for guessing its purpose. With the device, the guide who has the wireless sender can be some distance away from the participants doing an auditory introduction of the landmark without shouting his voice hoarse. Call me suaku (mountain tortoise) but I have never used one in my tours local or overseas. Credit to My Community for innovative use of technology. The device is useful for it allows the participants to wander away from the tour group (not too far of course) and still enjoy running commentary from the guide.
We were told guides for My Community tours are not fixed. Our tour guide this time is Huang Eu Chai who is a volunteer guide and trainer in Friends of My Community. From his personal website I learnt that he is actually a travel consultant specializing in Italy. Eu Chai spent his childhood and adult years in Queenstown. With such relevant personal and industry experience, he is the best man for the job. Indeed, his excellent tour leading skills coupled with the smooth delivery of his commentary shine through on that Sunday morning.
First stop was Chip Bee Gardens but the storytelling started at Holland Village Station. Eu Chai shared with us one interesting nugget on the station design; the proposal to have the exit situated right after the fare gate that would lead one ascending from concourse to ground level to the open space in front of the shop houses, i.e. what is Holland Village Park today. This was not realized; we have exit B and C today on the Holland Village side connected by a "Shop and Dine" corridor to the station.
Design of Holland Village Station exits (image credit: SMRT). Read this complaint how commuters are forced to walk 300m to catch a train. |
Having finished Chip Bee Estate, the group made our way to Holland Road Shopping Centre opposite. The new building on my right seems a little out of place. Then I realized the old Taman Warna Post Office which I used to see from Holland Village side had been demolished. By the way, Holland Village with its trademark windmill building (more on this later) was not named after a Dutch settlement. By most accounts, it was an architect and amateur actor Hugh Holland that Holland Road was named after in 1907 and from which the village derived its name.
We stopped at Thambi Magazine Store and Money Changer where arrangement had been made to interview the young boss Sam (Mr P. Senthilmurugan). The elder Mr Thambi (Periathambi G) whom many associated with this iconic magazine stall had passed away in 2013. We learnt from Sam that the business started from his grandfather who delivered newspapers to the military camps and his father expanded into magazines due to a demand from the British servicemen and their families in the area. The store carries about 4000 magazines in the course of the year. Many are in English dealing with specialised / hobbyist topics commanding price tags typical of imported goods; there is certainly an upmarket feel browsing them along the five-foot way. One Caucasian tour participant remarked, "I like them, very simple". He was referring not to the magazines but the mass market children toys on display outside the entrance, reminding us their clientele does span a wide segment of the population.
One is spoilt for choice at Thambi Magazine |
Tucked between the two units at Lorong Liput is a staircase access advertising ice agent and school bus service business. Eu Chai also shared one particular unit along this road that is often changing owner due to ... bad fengshui? |
Next stop was Jia Ying Wu Shu Memorial Hall / Ying Fo Fui Kun Cemetery accessible via Holland Ave - Holland Close. This is a significant landmark in the trail as the Ancestral Hall actually predated Queenstown as part of the original 88-acre cemetery established in 1887 for Yin Fo Fui Kun clansmen from Jia Ying prefecture in Guangdong for burial and ancestral worship. The original cemetery (Shuang Long Shan or Double Dragon Hill) was compulsory acquired by HDB in the 1960s as a "logical extension of the Queenstown development". This extension are the estates of Buona Vista and Commonwealth; the hillock we see today walking down Holland Ave is a stark reminder of the cemetery's location. Today only 4.5 acres remain of the original 88; the neat rows of headstones, all looking surprisingly uniform, are from the original cemetery. The group learnt there are no physical remains under the headstones (note: from MyQueenstown Heritage Trail booklet, the ashes in urns were placed at either under the headstones, at the columbarium in the old Ancestral Hall or at the newer Ying Fo Fui Kun Memorial Hall; it remains to be seen how any urns are still under the headstones). As it was approaching Cheng Beng (Chinese's All Souls' Day), we saw folks making offerings and a canopy set up in front of the Ancestral Hall to prepare for the occasion. The Hall houses ancestral tablets since early 20th century and in 1926 a school was established in the hall (Ying Xin School) to provide education for the children.
Remnants of the original Shuang Long Shan at Ying Fo Fui Kun Cemetery. Ironically the hillock that once embraced these tombstones now house the HDB blocks while the tombstones are on flat ground. |
Ying Fo Fui Kun Cemetery marks the beginning of the Commonwealth Trail for our tour. We have left Holland Village, which many residents see as part of Buona Vista neighborhood, to venture into another neighborhood in Queenstown.
Stay tuned for Part 2.
1 comments:
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