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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Boat_QuayBoat Quay - Wikipedia

    Boat Quay is a historical quay in Singapore which is situated upstream from the mouth of the Singapore River on its southern bank. It spans from the shophouses near UOB Plaza, stretching along one bank of the Singapore River, all the way till Elgin Bridge.

  2. Boat Quay, a river embankment on the south bank of the Singapore River, 1 is one of the oldest and most historical areas in Singapore’s central region. For more than 150 years, warehouses (or godowns) thriving with economic activity lined the banks of north and south Boat Quay.

  3. Oct 2, 2018 · In the 1960s, Boat Quay saw a significant drop in usage as mechanization took over the role of bumboats (small wooden boats). The opening of a high-tech cargo center in Pasir Panjang was the death knell for trade along Boat Quay.

  4. Boat Quay was the vital artery that kept the famed entrepot trade of early Singapore owing, but things could have turned out very differently if the first British Resident William Farquhar had had his way.

  5. Boat Quay and Commercial Square grew rapidly. By the late 1860s, the mercantile community had outgrown the site, spilling over to another reclaimed strip of land to the south. Known as Collyer Quay, this stretch – from Johnston’s Pier to the old Telok Ayer Market – was reclaimed between 1859 and 1864. 4 This was part of a scheme conceived ...

  6. History of Old Singapore Boat Quay. No doubt you’ve realised that all the shophouses are concentrated on just one Embankment of Boat Quay. Legend has it that the Chinese immigrants set up home only on the south bank of the river, because to them, it resembled the concave belly of a carp.

  7. www.ura.gov.sg › Conservation-Portal › ExploreConservation Portal

    Boat Quay, now famous for its thriving nightlife, was once the centre of trading activities along the Singapore River. The area owes its unique charm and character to the warehouses and shophouses that line the river.

  8. Boat Quay was the hub of economic activity in Singapore in the early 20th century. The area was developed on reclaimed land. Earth was transported from a small hill in Battery Road to fill up the originally swampy area in the early 1820s.

  9. May 1, 2020 · During the heyday of the late 19 th century, Boat Quay was the busiest port in Singapore. According to Chinese mythology the river is shaped like a carp’s belly where Boat Quay stands. This is very prosperous.

  10. Closest to the river mouth, this was once Singapore’s centre of commerce, and it remained an important economic area into the 1960s. By the mid-1980s, many of the shophouses were in ruins, businesses having shifted to high-tech cargo centres elsewhere on the island.