Chai Chee

Chai Chee (Chinese: 菜市), also known as Kampong Chai Chee, is a housing estate located in the town of Bedok in Singapore. The estate was named after a village known as Kampong Chai Chee which formerly occupied the vicinity. It is served by two major namesake roads, namely Chai Chee Street and Chai Chee Drive, with minor lanes of Chai Chee Road, Chai Chee Avenue and the original Jalan Chai Chee. Part of the estate today sits atop a hill that overlooks neighbouring Kembangan and Opera Estate.

Chai Chee
HDB Estate
Other transcription(s)
  Chinese菜市
  Pinyincài shì
  Pe̍h-ōe-jīChhài-chhī
  MalayChai Chee
  Tamilசாய் சீ
HDB flats in Chai Chee estate
Chai Chee
Coordinates: 1.32565°N 103.92147°E / 1.32565; 103.92147
Country Singapore
RegionEast Region
Planning areaBedok
Planning subzoneKembangan

Etymology

In the Hokkien dialect of the Chinese language, Chai Chee may be translated to mean Vegetable Market (菜市).[1]

History

Before the estate was built, the area was primarily farmland over a series of rolling hills. The kampong, or village, was located on a high hill around where the Singapore Anti-tuberculosis Association (SATA) Clinic now stands. In the past, one needs to go downhill to reach the clinic. Today the clinic sits much higher than the surrounding areas after the hills were levelled.

Kampong Chai Chee

Kampong Chai Chee was formed in the 1920s as a Chinese village off old Upper Changi Road (then known as Changi Road). The village developed in the area around the former Peng Ann and Peng Ghee roads. A market serving the village used to exist at the junction of these two roads.[2]

A 1971 article in The New Nation described Kampong Chai Chee as a large village spread over several hills and valleys. It consisted of mostly attap houses among tall coconut palms, set back off dusty roads.[3]

Redevelopment as Chai Chee estate

Chai Chee Districts Map

When development began in the late 1960s, the estate was built originally with 40 blocks of flats, consisting mainly of rental units. It was the first Housing and Development Board estate to be built in the eastern part of Singapore. Community amenities were built, such as a market, food centre, shops, banks, library, community center, kindergarten and a bus terminus. To provide for employment, there were 3 factories built - Rollei Cameras, Varta Batteries and Nippon Miniature Bearing (NMB).

Chai Chee Estate quickly gained importance as it was then the only urban estate in the mainly rural part of eastern Singapore. In the early 1970s, the electoral division of Chai Chee stretched all the way southwards to Upper East Coast Road. This led to the naming of the school there as Chai Chee Secondary School,[4] even though today that area is no longer part of Chai Chee Estate.

Amenities

Chai Chee today is served by amenities like the Viva Business Park, which is a mixed commercial development that offers both office and shopping space. The business park, which is the first in the area, developed over the former Rollei and Varta factories, houses Decathlon's first South East Asia flagship store[5] and Harvey Norman first factory outlet in Singapore,[6] amongst other retail, food and beverage businesses. The estate is also served by many shophouses inside it. Residents of the nearby private estates are known to frequent Chai Chee due to limited amenities available in their respective areas.[7]

There are various healthcare facilities and nursing homes in this mature estate. For one the SATA Clinic continues to operate in the area. There are also others like the ECON Medicare Centre and Nursing Home and Moral Home for the Disabled Adults.

There are various places of worship in the estate like the Bethesda Cathedral, Chai Chee United Temple (菜市聯合宮), Masjid Al-Ansar and Soon San Teng Temple (顺山亭).

The area is also served by the Kampong Kembangan Community Club, which is located in Kembangan, because it is part of the Kembangan-Chai Chee Constituency in the Marine Parade Group Representation Constituency. It is not to be confused with the Kampong Chai Chee Community Club located in Bedok that serves the East Coast Group Representation Constituency.

The area falls under the jurisdiction of the Kampong Chai Chee Neighbourhood Police Post (NPP) and the Bedok South Neighbourhood Police Centre (NPC), which is part of the Bedok Police Division, and the Chai Chee Fire Post that is supplemented by the 2nd Singapore Civil Defence Force DIV HQ.[8]

Education

Educational institutions in Chai Chee include Ping Yi Secondary School[9] and the NPS International School. There are also kindergartens like the PCF Kindergarten in the estate.

There used to be multiple schools in the area some of which are now defunct namely:

  • Chong Hua Chinese School, from 1923 to c.1972, was located beside the SATA Clinic[10] [11]
  • East Coast Primary School, from 1982 to 2018 before merging with Damai Primary School, it was located at the current site of NPS International School before moving south in 2001[12]
  • Eunos Primary School, from 2001 to 2004 used the holding site at where NPS International School is located at now till its new building was ready
  • ITE Bedok Campus, formerly known as Bedok Vocational Institute, from 1987 to 2010, it has now merged into ITE College East at Simei[13]
  • Jaya Primary School, from 1984 to 1998, it formerly stood at where the East Coast Primary School last was[14]
  • Pin Ghee Public School (Pin Ghee High School), from 1934 to 1976 was located near the junction of present day Chai Chee Street and Bedok North Road, it is unrelated to the current Pin Yi Secondary School[15]

Industries

Today the Chai Chee Lane Industrial Estate sits on where some of the former factories used to operate, NMB however continues to stand in the heart of Chai Chee. In addition, the Technopark @ Chai Chee was built over where the Rollei Cameras factory used to be, to enhance the industries there and has since been revitalised as the Viva Business Park. In 2017, the Land Transport Authority opened a new office at the site of the former ITE Campus to ease the overcrowding of its Hampshire Road Headquarters, it is however expected to be a temporary arrangement as there are plans to move its operation to Jurong East, touted as the second regional hub of Singapore, after 2020 when the site becomes ready.[16]

Transportation

The estate has no MRT station of its own, but is in between two nearby MRT stations, the Kembangan and Bedok MRT stations on the East West MRT line. The estate is served by limited public bus service, namely bus service 26, 222 and 229. There are more bus services to be found along New Upper Changi Road that lies south of the estate, or Bedok North Road north of the estate, both of which are bi-directional. The former Chai Chee Bus Terminal has ceased operation since 1985 and about half its services were rerouted in phases to the then newly opened Bedok Bus Interchange further east, while the rest of its bus services were withdrawn.[17] The Pan Island Expressway that lies north of the area has an exit (exit 8A) that leads towards the estate.

Incidents

Chai Chee has had its fair share of incidents relating to criminal activities (including burglary, robbery and loan shark activities), fire outbreaks and weather related issues.

  • On 19 February 1973, a shopkeeper was found dead and safe forced open in his shop off Jalan Chai Chee. He was the third person in three weeks found dead with heads battered, with the other cases being in Jurong and Jalan Besar. The case was classified as murder cum robbery by the police.[18]
  • On 19 July 2008, the body of 39 year old Tan Lay Lan, a freelance masseuse, was found in a luggage in her apartment when neighbours complained of a foul smell. She is believed to have been strangled to death. She was reported missing two days earlier and was last seen alighting from a taxi with an unknown man near her home at Block 38 Chai Chee Avenue. This murder case has yet to be solved and the murderer is still at large.[19]
  • On 25 November 2012, a 31 year old Chinese man carried out an armed robbery of a convenience store along Chai Chee Road and made away with about $400 in cash. He was arrested the next evening in the nearby vicinity.[20]
  • On 30 October 2013, flash floods occurred for the second time in three days at the junction of Chai Chee Road and New Upper Changi Road leaving the roads impassable. PUB has since taken steps to improve the drainage works and raise the depressed section of Chai Chee Road.[21]
  • On 20 June 2017, a 41 year old man was arrested for breaking into Ping Yi Secondary School and stealing several laptops. He was arrested the same day the police report was made.[22]

References

  1. "Singapore towns, back in the day". AsiaOne. 18 November 2014. Retrieved 2016-04-16.
  2. "Kampong Chai Chee". Singapore Infopedia. Retrieved 2016-04-16.
  3. Sheppard, Trish (12 May 1971). "Disappearing kampongs". The New Nation. Retrieved 16 April 2016 via NewspaperSG.
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-02-12. Retrieved 2010-03-25.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. "More opportunities for business parks in Singapore to be varied: Analysts". 2015-05-06. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
  6. "Harvey Norman opens new factory outlet". 2017-07-15. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
  7. "Eye on Siglap: Singapore's coolest neighbourhood". 2016-01-15. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
  8. "SCDF Organisation Structure". 2017. Archived from the original on 2018-03-13. Retrieved 2018-03-13.
  9. Leow, Si Wan (20 February 2010). "Punctual students get a reward". AsiaOne. Retrieved 2016-04-16.
  10. "Records of Chong Hua MOE". Retrieved 2018-03-23.
  11. "芽籠中華學校開一週年紀念會預誌". 1924-07-04. Retrieved 2018-03-24.
  12. "East Coast Primary History". Archived from the original on 2018-03-27. Retrieved 2018-03-23.
  13. "Bedok Institute of Technical Education". Retrieved 2018-03-18.
  14. "Jaya Primary School History". Archived from the original on 2018-03-17. Retrieved 2018-03-17.
  15. "Pin Ghee High School History". Archived from the original on 2018-03-08. Retrieved 2018-03-17.
  16. "LTA plans new office in Bedok as staff strength grows". 2015-04-06. Retrieved 2018-03-17.
  17. "Those years when we waited for our buses together". 2012-10-28. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
  18. "Shopkeeper slain". 1973-02-19. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
  19. "Chai Chee murder suspect's ID still unknown". 2009-10-07. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
  20. "Man robs Chai Chee convenience store of $400". 2012-11-27. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
  21. "Moves to cut flood risk in Chai Chee stepped up". 2013-10-31. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
  22. "41-year-old man arrested for breaking into school, stealing laptops". 2017-06-17. Retrieved 2018-03-14.


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