place

Tou Mu Kung Temple

1921 establishments in SingaporeAC with 0 elementsBuildings and structures in HougangChinese-Singaporean cultureNational monuments of Singapore
Religious buildings and structures completed in 1921Taoism in SingaporeTaoist temples in SingaporeTourist attractions in North-East Region, Singapore
Tou Mu Kung Temple 4, Sep 06
Tou Mu Kung Temple 4, Sep 06

The Tou Mu Kung Temple 斗母宮 is a Taoist temple situated on Upper Serangoon Road, Singapore. Worshipping the Empress Registrar of Birth or Doumu (斗母) and Nine Emperor (九皇大帝) Deities, the temple has both Taoist and Buddhist influences. There are other temples dedicated to Tou Mu (Dou Mu) in many parts of China (e.g. on Mount Tai).

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Tou Mu Kung Temple (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Tou Mu Kung Temple
Upper Serangoon Road,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Tou Mu Kung TempleContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 1.355 ° E 103.87888888889 °
placeShow on map

Address

Jiu Huan Da Di Temple

Upper Serangoon Road
534636 , Hougang
Singapore
mapOpen on Google Maps

Tou Mu Kung Temple 4, Sep 06
Tou Mu Kung Temple 4, Sep 06
Share experience

Nearby Places

Serangoon MRT station
Serangoon MRT station

Serangoon MRT station is an underground Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) interchange station on the North East (NEL) and Circle (CCL) lines. Situated in Serangoon, Singapore along Upper Serangoon Road and Serangoon Central, the station is integrated with the Nex shopping complex and the Serangoon Bus Interchange. The station is near the Serangoon Neighbourhood Police Centre and Braddell Heights Community Hub and serves various residential estates in the area. Preliminary studies for the NEL in the late 1980s included a tentative line alignment serving the Serangoon area. The station was confirmed in 1996; its construction involved the erection of the road viaduct above Upper Serangoon Road. In October 1999, it was announced that the station would interchange with the CCL. The NEL station was completed in June 2003. During the construction of the CCL tunnels, ground settlement caused the NEL station to sink, leading to a brief halt in excavation works. The CCL platforms opened in May 2009 as part of Stage 3 of the CCL. The station has eight entrances, four of which are triangular and enclosed in cubic structures. The station features three artworks as part of the MRT network's Art-in-Transit programme. The NEL platforms and concourse display woodcut prints as part of Eng Joo Heng's artwork Memories of Childhood. The CCL station's concourse features the painting View of Life by Sarkasi Said, while the CCL platforms contain a set of art seats entitled Matrix.