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Yishun New Town
By Thulaja, Naidu Ratnala written on 2003-11-06
National Library Board Singapore
Comments on article: InfopediaTalk
History
The word Yishun is a pinyinised version of
the word "Nee Soon". Lim Nee Soon (b. 12 November,
1879 Singapore - d. 20 March 1936, Shanghai, China) was a
prominent industrialist, making his fortune from rubber and
pineapples. He was also known as a caring landlord, providing
much for the villagers who worked under him. The growth of the
estates under his ownership started when as a young man of 24,
Nee Soon bought land from the government around the Seletar
River for cultivation. Before the arrival of rubber, in the
middle of the 19th century, the area around the Seletar River
was a flourishing gambier and pepper stronghold. These crops
declined at the end of the 19th century, to be replaced by
rubber. At the peak of Nee Soon's career, his rubber
estates covered areas like Jurong, Choa Chu Kang, Mandai,
Thomson and Johor. Nee Soon district developed into an extended
settlement as Chinese immigrants were hired to become labourers
in the rubber plantations. They then settled down forming
villages, paying a token amount for the land they rented from
Nee Soon. The villages include Mandai Tekong Village, Nee Soon
Village, Hainan Village, Hup Choon Kek Village, Phua Village
a.k.a. Heng Leh Pah Village, Kum Mang Hng Village, Kampong
Telok Soo and Chye Kay Village.
To supplement their livelihood, the villagers took vegetables
and fruit, and pig and poultry farming. From the 1960s onwards,
they extended their farming activities to include tropical fish
and orchid. This along with improved farming techniques
contributed to the rise in prosperity of the population of Nee
Soon district. In 1979, pig farming was stopped following the
government's directive to restrict pig farms to Ponggol and
Lim Chu Kang.
Description
Development of the areas that once made up the Nee Soon estate
began in 1976 with the initiation of a project called the
Yishun New Town Project. The project at first allocated 907 ha
of land towards public housing and industrial development, but
the land area was later increased to over 919 ha. Construction
work began in 1977, prior to which some resettlement of the
villages had taken place. Most of the residents of Chye Kay
Village were moved to Ang Mo Kio, while those who were engaged
in rearing aquarium fish were moved to Tampines. The Yishun New
Town area is flanked by Admiralty Road, Yishun Avenue 1 and
Sembawang Road. Yishun Ring Road lies at the near-core of this
town as a circle road linking almost all other roads in the
Yishun New Town.
The New Town was designed with convenience in mind, for
schools, markets, religious buildings, community buildings,
shopping and recreational facilities to be within easy reach.
The Masjid Darul Makmur, located at the junction of Yishun Ring
Road and Yishun Avenue 2, was opened officially on 23 July
1987. A combined temple also constructed in 1987, is home to
two Chinese temples, the Chu Sheng Tong Temple and the Hua
Sua Keng Temple. A Hindu temple, the Sree Maha Mariamman
Temple, established in 1942 at the junction of Upper Thomson
Road and Mandai road, came to be relocated at the junction of
Yishun Avenue 3 and Yishun Ring Road during the course of the
redevelopment work. On 27 August 1995, two Sikh
temples, Sembawang and Jalan Kayu temples, were merged
into the Gurdwara Sahib Yishun (Yishun Sikh Temple) which
spread over 1317 sq m.
The Yishun Bus Interchange, constructed by the Housing
Development Board (HDB), was officially opened on 23 August
1987 and handed over to Trans Island Bus Services Ltd (TIBS) on
the same day. Khatib and Yishun MRT stations, in the Yishun New
Town, began services in 1989 as a part of the North-South line.
The Yishun Town Park, a 17 ha. pentagon-shaped site, flanked by
Yishun Avenue 4, Yishun Central, Yishun Avenue 11 and Yishun
Ring Road, was built in the mid-1990s. In 1993, shopkeepers,
merchants and tradesmen at Yishun Ring Road pooled their
resources and upgraded their commercial units into a shopping
area called Chong Pang City. It is made up of around 125 shops,
a cooked food centre and wet market stalls, and it stands out
with its aesthetically -designed pedestrian malls and
archways.
Schools along the road are the Jiemin Primary School, Yishun
Secondary School, Yishun Primary School, Northbrooks Secondary
School, Naval Base Secondary School, Peiying Primary School and
Northland Secondary School. In 1996, the government announced
plans to upgrade facilities in the new town to include better
hawker stalls, shopping precincts and parking lots. In the same
year, the URA announced the government's plans to sell land
in the Yishun New Town for the construction of low and
medium-rise private houses. About 1000 new housing units were
built at the end of the 1990s, at two locations - north of the
junction of Yishun Avenue 2 and Yishun Ring Road and along
Sembawang Road.
Author
Naidu Ratnala Thulaja
References
Savage, V. R., & Yeoh, B. S. A. (2003). Toponymics: A
study of Singapore street names (p. 414). Singapore:
Eastern Universities Press.
(Call no.: RSING 915.9570014 SAV)
Oral History Department. (1987). A pictorial history of Nee
Soon Community (pp. 15, 18, 20-30, 59-73, 161-179).
Singapore : The grassroots organisations of Nee Soon
Constituency, National Archives, Oral History Department.
(Call no.: RSING 959.57 PIC)
Fernandez, W. (1996, April 22). New facilities for Yishun, says
Mah. The Straits Times, p. 27.
Siow, M. (1993, May 30). Yishun shops band to build their own
"shopping mall'. The Straits Times, p.
23.
Tan, B. H. (1987, November 24). Man behind old Nee Soon
village. The Straits Times.
URA to sell Yishun land for "homes with a view'.
(1996, January 31). The Straits Times, p. 35.
Two Sikh temples merge into one in Yishun. (1995, August 28).
The Straits Times, p. 39.
New Sikh temple to replace 2 in Yishun. (1993, October 18).
The Straits Times, p. 24.
Nature park in the heart of Yishun within 2 years. (1992,
November 30). The Straits Times, p. 45.
Subject
Architecture and Landscape>>Streets and Places
Geography>>Population>>Urban Planning
Street names--Singapore
Urbanization--Singapore
Arts>>Architecture>>Public and commercial buildings
People and communities>>Social groups and communities
>> Lim Nee Soon
>> Chinese Villages in the North
All Rights Reserved. National Library Board Singapore 2004.
