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Hougang

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Hougang
Others transcription(s)
 • Chinese后港
 • PinyinHòugǎng
 • MalayHougang
 • Tamilஹவ்காங்
 • Tamil romanisationHāukang
From top left to right: Hougang Central, Aerial view of Kovan, Kampong Lorong Buangkok, Flats along Hougang Avenue 4, Heritage Garden of the Institute of Mental Health, Panoramic view of Punggol Park
Hougang is located in Singapore
Hougang
Hougang
Location of Hougang within Singapore
Coordinates: 1°22′18.4″N 103°53′35″E / 1.371778°N 103.89306°E / 1.371778; 103.89306
Country Singapore
RegionNorth-East Region
CDCs
Town councils
  • Ang Mo Kio Town Council
  • Aljunied-Hougang Town Council
  • Marine Parade Town Council
Constituencies
Government
 • MayorsCentral Singapore CDC

North East CDC

South East CDC


 • Members of ParliamentAljunied GRC

Ang Mo Kio GRC

Hougang SMC

Marine Parade GRC

Area
 • Total
13.93 km2 (5.38 sq mi)
 • Residential3.67 km2 (1.42 sq mi)
Population
 (2018)[1][3][4]
 • Total
247,528
 • Density18,000/km2 (46,000/sq mi)
DemonymsOfficial
  • Hougang Resident

Colloquial

  • Hougangster
Postal district
19
Dwelling units51,646
Projected ultimate72,000

Hougang (Chinese: 后港, Tamil: ஹவ்காங்) is a planning area and mature residential town located in the North-East Region of Singapore. The town is the most populous in the region, being home to 247,528 residents as of 2018.[5] Hougang planning area is bordered by Sengkang to the north, Geylang and Serangoon to the south, Bedok to the southeast, Toa Payoh to the southwest, Paya Lebar to the east, Ang Mo Kio to the west and Bishan to the northwest.

Subzones

Subzones Accesibility
1) Hougang East Hougang MRT station
2) Defu Industrial Park Defu MRT station
Buses
3) Tai Seng Tai Seng MRT station
Buses
4) Lorong Halus Pasir Ris MRT station
Buses
5) Kangkar Hougang MRT station
6) Hougang West Serangoon North MRT station
Buses
7) Trafalgar Buangkok MRT station
Buses
8) Lorong Ah Soo Serangoon MRT station
Buses
9) Kovan Kovan MRT station
10) Hougang Central Hougang MRT station
Hougang Central Bus Interchange

Etymology and history

Hougang is the pinyin version of Aū-káng, a Hokkien and Teochew name meaning "river end", as Hougang is located upstream or at the back of Sungei Serangoon. In the past, the name connoted the area stretching from the fifth milestone junction of Upper Serangoon Road and Upper Paya Lebar Road/Boundary Road to the seventh and a half milestone junction of Upper Serangoon Road and Punggol Road. The area just beyond the seventh milestone along Punggol Road was formerly considered part of Punggol but is now within Hougang Town and that section of Punggol Road is now Hougang Avenue 8, with Punggol Road starting further north.[6]

Pig farming was carried out in Punggol, including the area of Punggol that is now part of Hougang Town. The last of these pig farmers were relocated by the late-1990s to flats built in Hougang. Today, Hougang is an HDB new town with over 40,000 housing units interspersed with pockets of private residential areas.

There was also a fishing port at the end of Upper Serangoon Road beyond the seventh milestone.

At Hougang Street 21, there was a well that is still identified as the tua jia kha (大井脚) well structure. This well identified the Teochew village of tua jia kha which means the "foot of a big well". In the past, the village was a popular place for food, street wayangs, itinerant Chinese medicine men and story tellers spinning yarns.

Hougang has been developed since 1977 with the construction of Tampines Way. Further development has been made for the development of new neighbourhoods in Neighbourhood 1 - 3 by 1983, Neighbourhood 4 - 7 by 1992. Neighbourhood 8 is the city centre of the Hougang, completed in 1994. Neighbourhood 9 has been in the recent and has been completed by 2000.

In 2015, project named Hougang Capeview, a Build-To-Order project at Upper Serangoon Road, is the first public housing project to receive the CONQUAS Star, an accolade administered by the Building and Construction Authority. Hougang Capeview, which comprises 781 residential units in six blocks at Upper Serangoon Road, received a Construction Quality Assessment System (CONQUAS) score of more than 95, above the national average of 88.2. The CONQUAS score is BCA’s measure of construction quality across Singapore.[7]

Shopping

Hougang has 8 shopping malls which are

  • Hougang Mall, a five-storey shopping mall with an NTUC Fairprice outlet, Singtel outlet, Starhub outlet, and Popular bookstore. The mall serves the residents of Hougang Central.
  • Hougang Green Shopping Mall, a four-storey shopping mall with a Sheng Siong outlet. The mall serves Hougang West.
  • The Midtown, a mixed development with a condominium and a cluster of shops in Hougang Central.
  • Hougang 1, a suburban mall with an NTUC Fairprice Xtra outlet in Hougang West.
  • Heartland Mall, a suburban mall in Kovan. It has a Cold Storage outlet and Popular bookstore.
  • Kang Kar Mall, a two-storey shopping centre which has a Kang Kar Food Court and a two-storey NTUC Fairprice outley.
  • Upper Serangoon Shopping Centre, a suburban mall that has a cluster of shops, it serves residents of Kovan.
  • Buangkok Square Shopping Mall, a mixed developement shopping mall in Buangkok with condominiums and a three storey shopping mall with McDonalds, and a Prime Supermarket.

Transport

Bus Interchange

Hougang Central Bus Interchange

Hougang Central Bus Interchange is a bus interchange serving the town of Hougang. It is located directly above Hougang MRT Station. By 2030, Hougang Central Bus Interchange would be majorly renovated to accomodate the Cross Island Line section, and would become an Integrated Transport Hub in 2030.

Bus Depots

Hougang Bus Depot

Hougang Bus Depot is an SBS Transit West District bus depot located in Hougang, Singapore. As of November 2014, the total fleet is 600 buses. Hougang Bus Depot started operations in 1983 when the north-east which is Hougang and Serangoon was developed and previously, all operations had been on Ang Mo Kio Bus Depot and Bedok Bus Depot respectively.

Mass Rapid Transit Stations

Hougang MRT Station

Mass Rapid Transit Depots

Amenities

Hougang Mall Shopping Centre
Another view of Hougang Mall Shopping Centre, before renovation

Hougang is regarded as part of the "heartland" of Singapore, a significant distance away from the Central Area. Most of its commercial activity is centred on a few shopping malls such as Hougang Mall, Kang Kar Mall, Heartland Mall, Upper Serangoon Shopping Centre and Hougang1.

Similar to most other residential towns in Singapore, Hougang was designed to be a partially self-sufficient with enough amenities to minimize the number of residents commuting to the Central Area. Facilities include Hougang Sports Hall, an indoor sports complex operated by Sport Singapore which runs ClubFITT membership and sports programmes, Hougang stadium home to S.League club Hougang United, an aquatics centre, a number of parks such as Punggol Park, along with many wet markets and hawker centres.

One of the more prominent landmarks in Hougang is the Buangkok Green Medical Park, which houses several medical facilities including the Institute of Mental Health (IMH) and Singapore Leprosy Relief Association (SILRA).

The Hougang Central Bus Interchange serves Hougang Town with a range of bus services going to other parts of the island. It is located in Hougang Central, near Hougang Mall and it has an underground link to Hougang MRT Station. This bus interchange was officially opened on 17 February 1995 by former cabinet minister Goh Chee Wee, who was then Senior Minister of State for Communications, Trade and Industry to serve all buses around the Hougang Area. Its sister bus interchange, Hougang South Bus Interchange (that is near to Kovan MRT station) ceased operations in 2004 and was converted to Kovan Hub.

Two even older bus terminals operated in Hougang before the construction of the Hougang Central and Hougang South Bus Interchanges. One was at the end of Upper Serangoon Road in Kangkar Village, which was replaced by Hougang Central, while the other was at the sixth and a half milestone of Upper Serangoon Road, which was replaced by Hougang South.[8]

Highlights

Houses in Hougang

A distinctive feature of Hougang lies in the large semi-circular balconies which occur in many Housing and Development Board public housing flats in the area. This feature is not as prevalent in public housing outside Hougang. The latest addition of new Condominium will be Florence Residences in 2019.

Politics

The political representation of Hougang was split into four different constituencies as of the 2015 elections, three of which were Group Representation Constituencies (GRC) (Aljunied, Ang Mo Kio, and Marine Parade), and one Single Member Constituency (SMC) bearing the same name, the Hougang Single Member Constituency. Currently, Aljunied and Hougang wards were managed by the opposition Workers' Party (WP), while Ang Mo Kio and Marine Parade were managed by the ruling People's Action Party (PAP). Previously, Hougang were administered by five now-defunct wards (Jalan Kayu, Paya Lebar, Punggol, Serangoon Gardens and Upper Serangoon), before it redistricted into GRCs, notably Cheng San GRC (also defunct since 2001).

The area covering Hougang Avenues 2, 5, 7 and a small portion of Hougang Central, falls under the namesake Hougang SMC, where it was carved out from Punggol ward ahead of the 1988 elections. The first Member Of Parliament (MP) of the ward was PAP's Tang Guan Seng, until it had been captured by former WP secretary-general Low Thia Khiang in 1991. Low left the ward to contest (and later elect himself in) Aljunied GRC ahead of the 2011 elections, and was replaced by Yaw Shin Leong, another WP candidate who previously contested Ang Mo Kio GRC in the 2006 elections.[9] Yaw remained as an MP until his expulsion from the party's CEC and resigned his seat in February 2012 over an extramarital affair. Png Eng Huat, a candidate whose part of the WP team contested East Coast GRC in the 2011 elections, had since represented this ward after winning his by-election on May 2012.

The area covering south of Hougang Avenues 6, 8, 10, as well as Punggol Park, Defu Industrial Park and the subregion of Kovan, falls under both Paya Lebar and Bedok Reservoir-Punggol divisions of Aljunied GRC. The GRC was previously managed by the PAP which members include Cynthia Phua and former Foreign Minister George Yeo, until it was taken over by WP's Chen Show Mao and Low Thia Khiang, respectively, in the 2011 elections, with the takeover marked the first time an opposition party had been elected in a GRC since it was established in 1988. The GRC was not contested in 2001 with the WP being disqualified due to incomplete applications, but in the 2006 elections, the WP were able to pose a strong challenge for this ward, with the members consist of WP's chairwoman Sylvia Lim and former members Goh Meng Seng (now the secretary-general of People's Power Party) and James Gomez[10]/

The north-western portions of Hougang (Avenues 4, 8 and 9, and Street 91), which includes Hougang Stadium and Regentville Condo, falls under the Ang Mo Kio-Hougang division of the Ang Mo Kio GRC. Its MP is Darryl David, who replaces former MP Yeo Guat Kwang after the 2015 elections. Prior to the 2011 elections, the ward was a part of Aljunied GRC (under the name of Aljunied-Hougang), where Yeo was then the MP.

The northern portions of Hougang (north of Avenues 6, 8 and Street 51) falls under the Sengkang South division, also part of the Ang Mo Kio GRC, where Gan Thiam Poh was the MP. It was previously belong to Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC (under the name of Punggol South) until it was carved out in 2015.

The western portions of Hougang, previously being Serangoon Gardens division, were belong to the Jalan Kayu (Ang Mo Kio) and Serangoon (Aljunied) divisions, which were represented by Intan Azura Mokhtar and Sylvia Lim, respectively. The area was previously belong to the short-lived Thomson GRC in 1991.

The southernmost portion of Hougang, Tai Seng, was under the Geylang Serai division of the Marine Parade GRC, where Fatimah Lateef represented the ward. Marine Parade was also contested by WP during the 2015 elections.

Schools

The area has a total of eight secondary schools, nine primary schools and Serangoon Junior College.[11] Serangoon Junior College was closed in 2019 and merged with Anderson Junior College.[12]

References

  1. ^ a b "Bukit Merah (Planning Area, Singapore) - Population Statistics, Charts, Map and Location". www.citypopulation.de.
  2. ^ HDB Key Statistics FY 2014/2015 Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Land Area and Dwelling Units by Town". Data Singapore. 2016. Retrieved 26 January 2018.
  4. ^ "Statistics Singapore - Geographic Distribution - 2018 Latest Data". Retrieved 11 February 2019.
  5. ^ "Hougang (Planning Area, Singapore) - Population Statistics and Location in Maps and Charts". City Population (with data from Singapore Department of Statistics). Retrieved 15 August 2016.
  6. ^ "OneMap, see Historical Maps from 1970s or earlier".
  7. ^ http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore/hougang-bto-development/2134928.html
  8. ^ List of former bus stations in Singapore
  9. ^ "E: WP takes Hougang, PAP wins 11 SMCs". Channel NewsAsia. Retrieved 8 June 2012.
  10. ^ Aljunied Group Representation Constituency
  11. ^ "School Information Service (SIS)". sis.moe.gov.sg.
  12. ^ "Anderson, Serangoon JCs among 8 junior colleges to merge". Channel NewsAsia. Retrieved 21 November 2017.

The Florence Residences

Sources

  • Victor R Savage, Brenda S A Yeoh (2003), Toponymics - A Study of Singapore Street Names, Eastern Universities Press, ISBN 981-210-205-1

See also