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15 attractions selected in this guide.

Merlion Park is the waterfront home of Singapore's half-lion, half-fish Merlion statue — the 8.6-meter national icon spouting water into Marina Bay, with the skyline and Marina Bay Sands as a backdrop.

Raffles Hotel is Singapore's most legendary building — a grand colonial hotel opened in 1887 where the Singapore Sling was invented, Somerset Maugham wrote, and tropical grandeur reached its zenith.

The Chinatown Heritage Centre is an immersive museum inside three restored shophouses, re-creating the cramped living conditions and daily struggles of early Chinese immigrants in 19th-century Singapore.

Sri Mariamman Temple is Singapore's oldest Hindu temple (1827), with an elaborately sculpted gopuram (entrance tower) covered in colorful Hindu deities, mythological scenes, and sacred cows.

The Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay is Singapore's premier performing arts centre — twin durian-shaped domes on the Marina Bay waterfront housing a concert hall, theatre, and a programme of 3,000+ free performances per year.

Fort Canning Park is a lush hilltop park steeped in over 700 years of Singapore's history — where 14th-century Malay kings held court, where the British built a fort, and where Singapore fell to Japan in 1942.

The Sultan Mosque (Masjid Sultan) is Singapore's most important Islamic building — a stunning 1932 Indo-Saracenic mosque with a golden onion dome, serving as the spiritual heart of the Kampong Glam quarter.

The Helix Bridge is a 280-metre pedestrian bridge connecting the Marina Centre promenade to the Bayfront area, designed in the form of a double-helix DNA structure. Opened in 2010, it was the first bridge in the world to adopt this architectural form, with four cantilevered viewing platforms framing different perspectives of the Marina Bay skyline.

Haw Par Villa is a free-admission theme park on Pasir Panjang Road built in 1937 by Aw Boon Haw, the creator of Tiger Balm. Its 8.5-hectare grounds contain over 1,000 statues and 150 giant dioramas depicting scenes from Chinese mythology, folklore, and Confucian moral tales — including the legendary Ten Courts of Hell.

The Buddha Tooth Relic Temple and Museum is a massive five-story Buddhist complex in Chinatown, built in 2007 to house what devotees believe is a tooth relic of the historical Buddha, displayed in a 3.5-tonne gold stupa.
Kranji War Memorial is a Commonwealth war cemetery in northwest Singapore, maintaining the graves of over 4,400 Allied soldiers and airmen who died during WW2 in the Asia-Pacific. The memorial walls also bear the names of over 24,000 servicemen whose graves are unknown.

Sri Srinivasa Perumal Temple is a major Hindu temple on Serangoon Road in the heart of Little India, dedicated to Lord Vishnu (as Perumal). Built in 1855, it features one of Singapore's finest five-tiered gopurams — a towering gateway covered in brightly painted figures from Hindu mythology, added in 1966.
CHIJMES (pronounced "chimes") is a dining, events, and heritage complex on Victoria Street, occupying a former Catholic convent and school. The centrepiece is Caldwell House and the neo-Gothic chapel — with fan-vaulted ceilings and magnificent stained-glass windows — which now hosts weddings, concerts, and fashion shows.

Thian Hock Keng is Singapore's oldest and most important Chinese temple (1840), dedicated to the sea goddess Mazu — a masterpiece of Hokkien architecture built without a single nail.

Emerald Hill is a quiet residential street just off the commercial bustle of Orchard Road, lined with over 100 beautifully preserved Peranakan terrace houses from the early 1900s. Their ornate facades — colourful ceramic tiles, carved timber doors, louvered shutters, and wrought-iron balconies — form one of Singapore's finest concentrations of Straits-Chinese architecture.