Difference between revisions of "Bras Basah station"
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{{Infobox/Station | {{Infobox/Station | ||
|TA1=RCC | |TA1=RCC | ||
|Code={{Code| | |Code={{Code/S|CC2|CCL}} | ||
|Name=Bras Basah<br>百胜<br>பிராஸ் பாசா | |Name=Bras Basah<br>百胜<br>பிராஸ் பாசா | ||
|Img=[[File:Bras Basah-CCL.png|centre|300px]] | |Img=[[File:Bras Basah-CCL.png|centre|300px]] | ||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
{{Infoline|Address|65 Bras Basah Road<br>Singapore 189561}} | {{Infoline|Address|65 Bras Basah Road<br>Singapore 189561}} | ||
{{Infoline|Line(s)|{{CCL}}}} | {{Infoline|Line(s)|{{CCL}}}} | ||
{{Infoline|Connections| | {{Infoline|Structure|Underground}} | ||
{{Infoline|Connections|{{Icon|Bus|B|25px|o={{CSS/BUS|s=|f=}}|a=Bus|d=inline}} {{Icon|Taxi|W|25px|o={{CSS/LTA|s=|f=}}|a=Taxi|d=inline}}}} | |||
{{Infoline|Abbreviation|BBS}} | {{Infoline|Abbreviation|BBS}} | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Bras Basah (CC2)''' is | '''Bras Basah (CC2)''' is a [[Mass Rapid Transit]] (MRT) station on the {{CCL}}. It is the second deepest station with a depth of 35m below ground level. It also houses the longest escalator, at 41 m which stretches from the ticket concourse to the transfer level and takes approximately one minute to travel.<ref name='factsheet'>[//eresources.nlb.gov.sg/webarchives/wayback/20130219033256/app.lta.gov.sg/data/apps/news/press/2010/Bras%20Basah%20Station%20Factsheet.pdf "Factsheet Bras Basah Station"]. Land Transport Authority. Archived on 19 February 2013.</ref> | ||
==History== | ==History== | ||
Line 17: | Line 18: | ||
!width=150|Date!!Event | !width=150|Date!!Event | ||
|- | |- | ||
|17 April 2010||Station officially | |17 April 2010||Station officially opened | ||
|} | |} | ||
The | ==Artworks== | ||
*[[File:CC2-The Amazing Neverending Underwater Adventures.png|300px]]<br>{{CCL}}: ''The Amazing Neverending Underwater Adventures!'' by Tan Kai Syng<br>The artist plays the protagonist, Desyphus, a “Perpetual Commuter” on an adventure on the {{CCL|b=}}. The videos projected on the wall below the station’s water-filled glass skylight takes commuters through themes of travel, time, memory and the train line.<ref>[//www.lta.gov.sg/content/ltagov/en/getting_around/public_transport/a_better_public_transport_experience/art_in_transit.html "Art in Transit"]. Land Transport Authority.</ref> | |||
*[[File:CC2-Sea Port of Singapore.png|300px]]<br>{{CCL}}: ''Sea Port of Singapore'' by Jaafar Latiff | |||
*[[File:CC2-Vibrant Singapore.png|300px]]<br>{{CCL}}: ''Vibrant Singapore'' by Thang Kiang How | |||
==Architecture== | ==Architecture== | ||
The station | The station design by WOHA resolves two conditions needed for the station: allowing a visual connection to the exterior to enhance the travel experience for the commuters, and enabling the station to blend into the landscape in the historic district and park location. A reflection pool, which also acts as the station roof, allows skylight to enter the station, and functions as a landscape element on the surface. With skylight entering the station, minimal artificial light is required for the station during the day. The natural light allows improvement in way-finding and safety for the commuters.<ref name='architectureau'>[//web.archive.org/web/20180110093517/https://architectureau.com/articles/bras-basah-mass-rapid/ "Bras Basah Mass Rapid Transit Station, Singapore"]. ArchitectureAU. Archived on 10 January 2018.</ref> The ventilation shafts of the station also blended into the landscape, avoiding any blocking of view lines across the site to the surrounding civic buildings.<ref name="woha">[//www.world-architects.com/en/woha-singapore/project/bras-basah-mass-rapid-transit-mrt-station "Bras Basah Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) Station"]. World-Architects.</ref> | ||
The station design was commissioned through the Marina Line Architectural Design Competition jointly organised by the Land Transport Authority (LTA) and the Singapore Institute of Architects (SIA). At the 2001 SIA Awards, the SIA awarded LTA the prize for ‘Excellence in Architectural Design Competitions’.<ref name='factsheet'/> In 2009, the station was awarded the "Best Transport Building" at the World Architecture Festival, on the basis that the design gives "precedence to the surrounding, historically important, colonial structures, creating a piazza-like urban space to the station underneath" and noted the design's functionality to allow natural light into the station.<ref>[//web.archive.org/web/20120220170044/www.worldbuildingsdirectory.com/project.cfm?id=1780 "Bras Basah Mass Rapid Transit Station"]. World Buildings Director. Archived on 20 February 2012.</ref> The station later won the Award for International Architecture at the AIA's 2010 National Architecture Awards.<ref name='architectureau'/> In addition, it won the Chicago Athenaeum and the European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies and International Architecture Awards in 2011.<ref>[//web.archive.org/web/20200717112010/www.chi-athenaeum.org/assets/pdf_archives/intarch/archive-2011-International-Arch-awards.pdf "The International Architectural Awards - 2011"]. The Chicago Athenaeum. Archived on 17 July 2020.</ref> | |||
==Layout== | ==Layout== | ||
Line 36: | Line 35: | ||
!L1 | !L1 | ||
|Street Level | |Street Level | ||
|Singapore Art Museum, Singapore Management University | |Singapore Art Museum, Singapore Management University, {{DT21| }} | ||
|- | |- | ||
!width=25|B1 | !width=25|B1 | ||
Line 53: | Line 52: | ||
|- | |- | ||
!rowspan=3|B5 | !rowspan=3|B5 | ||
|colspan=2|{{ | |colspan=2| | ||
{| class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width:100%;" | |||
!{{Layout/Platform|A|CCL}} | |||
|style='padding-right:.5em;'|{{Layout/Arrow|CCL|0}} <span style="display:inline-block;vertical-align:middle;"><span style="display:block;text-align:left;>{{Layout/Station|CC29}}</span><span style="display:block;text-align:left;>{{Layout/Station|CE2}} <small> via {{Layout/Station|CC4}}</small></span></span> | |||
|style='padding-left:.5em;border-left:1px solid;width:200px'|'''Service Map''' | |||
|- | |||
|colspan=3| | |||
<div style='overflow-x:scroll;white-space:nowrap;max-width:75vw;'> | |||
<span style="display:inline-block;vertical-align:top;><span style="display:block;text-align:right;">{{Layout/Map|CC2|#000|#fff|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC3|c=CCL|r={{Layout/Map-R|c=CCL}}}}</span><span style="display:block;text-align:right;">{{Layout/Map|CE2|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CE1|c=CCL|r=}}</span></span> {{Layout/Map|CC4|c=CCL|l={{Layout/Map-BL|c=CCL}}}} {{Layout/Map|CC5|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC6|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC7|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC8|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC9|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC10|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC11|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC12|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC13|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC14|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC15|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC16|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC17|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC19|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC20|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC21|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC22|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC23|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC24|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC25|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC26|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC27|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC28|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC29|c=CCL|r=}} | |||
</div> | |||
|} | |||
|- | |- | ||
|colspan=2 class="platform"|Platform A/B | |colspan=2 class="platform"|Platform A/B | ||
|- | |- | ||
|colspan=2|{{ | |colspan=2| | ||
{| class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width:100%;" | |||
!{{Layout/Platform|B|CCL}} | |||
|style='padding-right:.5em;'|{{Layout/Arrow|CCL|180}} {{Layout/Station|CC1}} | |||
|style='padding-left:.5em;border-left:1px solid;width:200px'|'''Service Map''' | |||
|- | |||
|colspan=3| | |||
<div style='overflow-x:scroll;white-space:nowrap;max-width:75vw;'> | |||
{{Layout/Map|CC1|c=CCL}} {{Layout/Map|CC2|#000|#fff|c=CCL|r=}} | |||
</div> | |||
|} | |||
|} | |} | ||
Line 64: | Line 83: | ||
!width=50|Exit!!width=50|Disabled-Access!!Location/Nearby | !width=50|Exit!!width=50|Disabled-Access!!Location/Nearby | ||
|- | |- | ||
|A|| ||style="text-align:left;"|Singapore Art Museum, NTUC Trade Union House | |A||{{NWAB}}||style="text-align:left;"|Singapore Art Museum, NTUC Trade Union House | ||
|- | |- | ||
|B||{{WAB}}||style="text-align:left;"|Singapore Management University | |B||{{WAB}}||style="text-align:left;"|Singapore Management University | ||
Line 70: | Line 89: | ||
|C||{{WAB}}||style="text-align:left;"|Singapore Management University | |C||{{WAB}}||style="text-align:left;"|Singapore Management University | ||
|- | |- | ||
|D|| ||style="text-align:left;"|Manulife Centre | |D||{{NWAB}}||style="text-align:left;"|Manulife Centre | ||
|- | |- | ||
|E|| ||style="text-align:left;"|Singapore Art Museum, Manulife Centre | |E||{{NWAB}}||style="text-align:left;"|Singapore Art Museum, Manulife Centre | ||
|} | |} | ||
Line 82: | Line 101: | ||
!width=70|Mon − Fri!!width=70|Sat!!width=70|Sun & P.H.!!width=70|Daily | !width=70|Mon − Fri!!width=70|Sat!!width=70|Sun & P.H.!!width=70|Daily | ||
|- | |- | ||
!colspan=5 | !colspan=5 style="{{CSS/CCL|s=|t=}}text-align:center;"|{{Icon|MRT|B|20px|d=inline}} {{CCL|style={{CSS/CCL|bg=none|s=|t=}}}} | ||
{{ | {{Timing|CC1||05:54|05:54|06:21|00:03|nv=}} | ||
{{ | {{Timing|CC29||05:39|05:39|06:06|22:50|nv=}} | ||
{{ | {{Timing|CC26||L=23:20|nv=}} | ||
{{ | {{Timing|CC23||L=23:36|nv=}} | ||
{{ | {{Timing|CC17||L=00:03|nv=}} | ||
{{ | {{Timing|CC11||L=00:11|nv=}} | ||
|} | |} | ||
===Bus=== | ===Bus=== | ||
:''More travel information: [[Alternative Travel Method/Bras Basah|Alternative Travel Method]]'' | |||
{|class="wikitable" | {|class="wikitable" | ||
!width=240|Bus Stop!!width=30|Exit!!width=300|Bus Service | !width=240|Bus Stop!!width=30|Exit!!width=300|Bus Service | ||
{{BusGuide| | {{BusGuide|{{BS01012}}| {{Exit/Cell|A}} }}{{Bus/2}} {{Bus/7}} {{Bus/12}} {{Bus/12|a=e}} {{Bus/32}} {{Bus/33}} {{Bus/51}} {{Bus/61}} {{Bus/63}} {{Bus/80}} {{Bus/175}} | ||
{{BusGuide| | {{BusGuide|{{BS04179}}| {{Exit/Cell|A}} }}{{Bus/7}} {{Bus/14}} {{Bus/14|a=e}} {{Bus/16}} {{Bus/16|a=M}} {{Bus/36}} {{Bus/77}} {{Bus/106}} {{Bus/111}} {{Bus/131}} {{Bus/167}} {{Bus/175}} {{Bus/502}} {{Bus/502|a=A}} {{Bus/518}} {{Bus/518|a=A}} {{Bus/652}} {{Bus/656}} {{Bus/660}} {{Bus/663}} {{Bus/665}} {{Bus/850|a=E}} {{Bus/857}} {{Bus/951|a=E}} | ||
{{ | {{BusGuide|{{BS04121}}| {{Exit/Cell|B}} }}{{Bus/7}} {{Bus/14}} {{Bus/14|a=e}} {{Bus/16}} {{Bus/16|a=M}} {{Bus/36}} {{Bus/77}} {{Bus/106}} {{Bus/111}} {{Bus/124}} {{Bus/131}} {{Bus/147}} {{Bus/166}} {{Bus/167}} {{Bus/174}} {{Bus/174|a=e}} {{Bus/175}} {{Bus/190}} {{Bus/652}} {{Bus/656}} {{Bus/660}} {{Bus/663}} {{Bus/665}} {{Bus/850|a=E}} {{Bus/857}} {{Bus/951|a=E}} | ||
{{BusGuide|{{BS04151}}| {{Exit/Cell|B}} }}{{Bus/130}} {{Bus/133}} {{Bus/145}} {{Bus/197}} {{Bus/851}} {{Bus/851|a=e}} {{Bus/960}} {{Bus/960|a=e}} | |||
{{BusGuide| | {{BusGuide|{{BS04019}}| {{Exit/Cell|D}} }}{{Bus/131}} {{Bus/147}} {{Bus/166}} {{Bus/857}} | ||
|} | |} | ||
Latest revision as of 18:47, 6 April 2024
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TRAVEL ADVISORY | !
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On Sunday, 24 November 2024, Bus Services , , & will be affected by road closure on Nicoll Highway from the First Bus to 10.00am. Please refer here for more information.
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CC2 Bras Basah 百胜 பிராஸ் பாசா*Graphic From SGTrains/Wikipedia/LTA | |
Statistics | |
---|---|
Address | 65 Bras Basah Road Singapore 189561 |
Line(s) | Circle Line |
Structure | Underground |
Connections | |
Abbreviation | BBS |
Bras Basah (CC2) is a Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) station on the Circle Line. It is the second deepest station with a depth of 35m below ground level. It also houses the longest escalator, at 41 m which stretches from the ticket concourse to the transfer level and takes approximately one minute to travel.[1]
History[edit]
Date | Event |
---|---|
17 April 2010 | Station officially opened |
Artworks[edit]
Circle Line: The Amazing Neverending Underwater Adventures! by Tan Kai Syng
The artist plays the protagonist, Desyphus, a “Perpetual Commuter” on an adventure on the Circle Line. The videos projected on the wall below the station’s water-filled glass skylight takes commuters through themes of travel, time, memory and the train line.[2]
Circle Line: Sea Port of Singapore by Jaafar Latiff
Circle Line: Vibrant Singapore by Thang Kiang How
Architecture[edit]
The station design by WOHA resolves two conditions needed for the station: allowing a visual connection to the exterior to enhance the travel experience for the commuters, and enabling the station to blend into the landscape in the historic district and park location. A reflection pool, which also acts as the station roof, allows skylight to enter the station, and functions as a landscape element on the surface. With skylight entering the station, minimal artificial light is required for the station during the day. The natural light allows improvement in way-finding and safety for the commuters.[3] The ventilation shafts of the station also blended into the landscape, avoiding any blocking of view lines across the site to the surrounding civic buildings.[4]
The station design was commissioned through the Marina Line Architectural Design Competition jointly organised by the Land Transport Authority (LTA) and the Singapore Institute of Architects (SIA). At the 2001 SIA Awards, the SIA awarded LTA the prize for ‘Excellence in Architectural Design Competitions’.[1] In 2009, the station was awarded the "Best Transport Building" at the World Architecture Festival, on the basis that the design gives "precedence to the surrounding, historically important, colonial structures, creating a piazza-like urban space to the station underneath" and noted the design's functionality to allow natural light into the station.[5] The station later won the Award for International Architecture at the AIA's 2010 National Architecture Awards.[3] In addition, it won the Chicago Athenaeum and the European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies and International Architecture Awards in 2011.[6]
Layout[edit]
L1 | Street Level | Singapore Art Museum, Singapore Management University, DT21Bencoolen | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
B1 | Concourse | Faregates, Ticketing Machines, Passenger Service Centre | ||||||
B2 | Service Level | Restricted access | ||||||
B3 | Service Level | Restricted access | ||||||
B4 | Transfer Hall | between Concourse and Platforms | ||||||
B5 |
| |||||||
Platform A/B | ||||||||
|
Exits[edit]
Transport Services[edit]
First/Last Train Timing[edit]
Destination | First Train | Last Train | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Mon − Fri | Sat | Sun & P.H. | Daily | |
Circle Line | ||||
CC1Dhoby Ghaut | 05:54 | 05:54 | 06:21 | 00:03 |
CC29HarbourFront | 05:39 | 05:39 | 06:06 | 22:50 |
CC26Pasir Panjang | – | – | – | 23:20 |
CC23one-north | – | – | – | 23:36 |
CC17Caldecott | – | – | – | 00:03 |
CC11Tai Seng | – | – | – | 00:11 |
Bus[edit]
- More travel information: Alternative Travel Method
Bus Stop | Exit | Bus Service | |
---|---|---|---|
Hotel Grand Pacific 01012 Victoria St |
|
||
Aft Bras Basah Stn Exit A 04179 Bras Basah Rd |
|
||
SMU 04121 Stamford Rd |
|
||
Cath of The Good Shepherd 04151 Victoria St |
|
||
Opp Bencoolen Stn Exit B 04019 Bencoolen St |
|
References[edit]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Factsheet Bras Basah Station". Land Transport Authority. Archived on 19 February 2013.
- ↑ "Art in Transit". Land Transport Authority.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 "Bras Basah Mass Rapid Transit Station, Singapore". ArchitectureAU. Archived on 10 January 2018.
- ↑ "Bras Basah Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) Station". World-Architects.
- ↑ "Bras Basah Mass Rapid Transit Station". World Buildings Director. Archived on 20 February 2012.
- ↑ "The International Architectural Awards - 2011". The Chicago Athenaeum. Archived on 17 July 2020.
Circle Line | [ V • T • E ] | |
---|---|---|
Stations | Dhoby Ghaut • Bras Basah • Esplanade • Promenade • Nicoll Highway • Stadium • Mountbatten • Dakota • Paya Lebar • MacPherson • Tai Seng • Bartley • Serangoon • Lorong Chuan • Bishan • Marymount • Caldecott • Bukit Brown • Botanic Gardens • Farrer Road • Holland Village • Buona Vista • one-north • Kent Ridge • Haw Par Villa • Pasir Panjang • Labrador Park • Telok Blangah • HarbourFront | |
CCL6Keppel • Cantonment • Prince Edward Road | ||
Circle Line ExtensionPromenade • Bayfront • Marina Bay | ||
Rolling Stock | 830 • 830C • 851E | |
Depots | Kim Chuan | |
Others | Bridging Service |