Showing posts with label Landmark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Landmark. Show all posts
Thursday, November 7, 2019
Tuesday, September 24, 2019
Singapore to demolish Sentosa's iconic Merlion
MANILA - The iconic 37-meter Merlion statue in Singapore's Sentosa will soon be demolished to make way for a new development on the island, the Straits Times has reported.
The report said the iconic structure would be demolished by the end of 2019 to make way for the S$90-million Sentosa Sensoryscape project.
The Sentosa Merlion is bigger than Singapore's known landmark, the Merlion statue located at the Merlion Park, which stands at only 8.6 meters.
The Sentosa Sensoryscape project will create a themed thoroughfare that will link Sentosa and Pulau Brani.
The Sentosa-Brani Master Plan was first announced by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong in August during his National Day Rally speech.
More details of the project were revealed to Singapore media last Sept. 20.
The project, which will connect Resorts World Sentosa to the beaches in the south of the city-state, will start by end of the year and is targeted for completion by 2022.
Sentosa Development Corporation, who is in charge of the project, said features such as look-out points, water features and other architectural elements would also create a multi-sensory experience for visitors.
The two islands will be divided into five zones, with hotels, large-scale attractions, dining and retail outlets, as well as green spaces.
The last day of operations for the Sentosa Merlion will be on Oct. 20.
Built in 1995, the Sentosa Merlion is the largest and tallest Merlion in Singapore.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
New York mourns end of hot dog classic
NEW YORK - No more "Recession Specials," neon lights and cheap bites washed down with papaya juice: New York has lost one of its most iconic hot-dog joints after three decades.
"Gray's Papaya" in Greenwich Village, a reputed favorite of late rocker Lou Reed, has fallen victim to the near daily roll call of New York institutions crushed by exorbitant rent increases.
Shops, bars, cafes and restaurants that for generations are considered integral to the world's most exciting city suddenly disappear overnight, no longer able to pay the rent.
"I'll miss getting those hot dogs at midnight," jobbing actor Peter Coleman, 28, told AFP in a nearby bar, waxing lyrical about the shuttered premises on Sixth Avenue and 8th Street.
"It's sad to see another neighborhood staple go the way of Ray's Pizza," said Coleman, who works in the neighborhood and still misses the beloved pizzeria that closed a few years ago.
Famous for its "recession special" -- two hot dogs and a medium soda for $4.95 -- Gray's Papaya was a veteran culinary landmark.
Kids, late-night drinkers, clubbers and the homeless counting out their last coins came for a dog and the legendary papaya drink "made from the magical melons of the tropics".
They flocked to the 24-seven joint, as much for its food as its quirky decor -- paper-mache fruit hanging from the ceiling and its witty ads: "If you're hungry, or broke or just in a hurry".
Another fan, filmmaker Ashbey Riley, paid tribute in an emotional blog on the Huffington Post.
"I can hardly remember the first time my father took me there. I must have been about three. It doesn't matter really. Gray's became an everlasting part of my life," she wrote.
"Gray's has always been there through every phase. Gray's was enduring, never changing, always dependable, forever delicious and conveniently, Gray's was always open," she added.
Tourists came for a genuine taste of the Big Apple.
The place featured on the small and silver screen in among others "Sex and the City," "How I Met Your Mother," and the 1998 rom-com "You've Got Mail" with Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks.
Owner Nicholas Gray confirmed the reason for the closure was the sharp increase in renewing the lease.
"They wanted to raise my rent to $50,000 from $30,000," he was quoted as saying in the local media.
Employees and the manager of Gray's remaining branch, away from the Manhattan bar scene on the Upper West Side, declined comment.
Journalist Jeremiah Moss who has written for The New Yorker, Playboy and the Paris Review, has cataloged rent casualties on his blog "Jeremiah's Vanishing New York" since 2001.
Moss blames much of the loss of "6,926 years of history" on billionaire mayor Michael Bloomberg, who left office in January after 12 years of rising inequality and booming property prices.
"It's been 12 merciless years of destruction and loss, from 'significant' losses to countless 'smaller' ones -- neighborhood laundromats, shoe repair shops, drugstores," Moss wrote.
Besides "Gray's Papaya" 2014 has already seen the loss of a clutch of other businesses, including the "Famous Oyster Bar", which shuttered after 55 years Seventh Avenue and 54th Street.
It put up a sign saying that it was closing "due to exorbitant rent prices". The owner was quoted as saying that four years ago the rent was $12,000 and now it's more than $30,000.
Another was well-known clothing store "Camouflage" in uber-chic Chelsea, kicked onto the kerb after 38 years when the rent more than tripled from $7,000 to $24,000 a month.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Saturday, January 18, 2014
Seoul to unveil futuristic design hub in March
MANILA, Philippines - Seoul will soon unveil a new futuristic-looking landmark building.
The Dongdaemun Design Plaza & Park (DDP), designed by world-renowned architect Zaha Hadid, will officially be opened on March 21.
Envisioned as a mecca for the design and creative industry, the DDP is said to be the first and largest building in the world that used three-dimensional digital construction.
Seoul city officials expect the DDP, which cost 484 billion Korean won (around P20 billion), to become a hub for global design trends and innovations.
The 85,000-square-meter structure with 62,692m2 plottage, has three underground floors and four floors. It consists of five spaces (Exhibition and Convention Halls, Information center, Training Center, Design Experience Hall, and Dongdaemun History & Culture Park) and 15 related facilities.
The Prtizker Prize winning Hadid laid out a concept of "Metonymic Landscape" for the DDP, which set out to create a new landscape for the historic Dongdaemun district.
For its opening in March, the DDP will host the "Korea Design Origin Exhibition" showing 80 national treasures including the Explanation Script for Hunminjeonge, the Joseon dynasty-era document explaining the meaning of Hangeul.
Other exhibitions scheduled for 2014 include ‘Sports and Design Exhibition’, ‘Exhibition for Zaha Hadid Works’ ‘Enzo Mari: Art of Design Exhibition’ and ‘Hochschule Fur Gestaltung Exhibition’.
The DDP will also host the 28th Seoul Fashion Week on March 21. The Seoul Fashion Week showcases young Korean designers, as well as rising Asian designers.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
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