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Farrer Park MRT station

2003 establishments in SingaporeKallangMass Rapid Transit (Singapore) stationsRailway stations opened in 2003Rochor
NE8 Farrer Park MRT Exit B 20201026 160443
NE8 Farrer Park MRT Exit B 20201026 160443

Farrer Park MRT station is an underground Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) station along the North East line, located on the boundary of Kallang and Rochor planning areas, Singapore. It is one of the two stations that serve the ethnic district of Little India. The station sits underneath the Connexion building, an integrated hospital (Farrer Park Hospital) and hotel complex (One Farrer Hotel). Farrer Park was named after John Farrer, who was President of the Municipal Commissioners from 1919 to 1931.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Farrer Park MRT station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Farrer Park MRT station
Race Course Road, Singapore Kallang

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Wikipedia: Farrer Park MRT stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 1.312314 ° E 103.854028 °
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Address

Farrer Park

Race Course Road
217562 Singapore, Kallang
Singapore
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Website
sbstransit.com.sg

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NE8 Farrer Park MRT Exit B 20201026 160443
NE8 Farrer Park MRT Exit B 20201026 160443
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Nearby Places

Sri Veeramakaliamman Temple
Sri Veeramakaliamman Temple

Sri Veeramakaliamman Temple (Tamil: ஸ்ரீ வீரமாகாளியம்மன் கோவில்; Chinese: 维拉马卡卡拉曼庙), also known earlier as Soonambu Kambam Kovil, is a Hindu temple located in the middle of Little India in the southern part of Singapore. The temple started as a shrine dedicated to the Hindu goddess Kali in 1855 before a temple was built by Bengali labourers in 1881.Images of Kali within the temple show her wearing a garland of skulls and ripping out the insides of her victims, and Kali sharing more peaceful family moments with her sons Ganesha and Murugan. The building is constructed in the style of South Indian Tamil temples common in Tamil Nadu as opposed to the style of Northeastern Indian Kali temples in Bengal, where Her worship is extremely widespread but the style of temple construction differs considerably. This temple has also been used to shelter people from Japanese air raids during the horrid period of World War 2 In 2018, the Charities Commissioner has barred the temple's chairman Sivakadacham, former chairman R Selvaraju, and secretary Ratha Krishnan Selvakumar from their posts, after the three, who were cheque signatories and approvers for payments, issued more than $1.5 million in uncrossed cheques. Of these, 45 cheques – totalling more than $227,000 – were not issued to the names of the intended recipients of the proceeds. The inquiry also revealed that Ratha had obtained loans of $350,000 without the management committee's approval and with no written loan agreements with the lenders. Cash loans and disbursements of proceeds from the loans were also not properly accounted for in the temple's records.