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DESTINATIONS ASIA | SINGAPORE


CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: Sentosa; the bike-friendly Rail Corridor; Gardens by the Bay supertrees


PICTURES: Singapore Tourism Board; Tamara Hinson; Shutterstock/ nattanan726


Bike-


friendlY hotels


Capella Singapore


As well as its collaboration with Brompton to offer


guests bicycles, this sprawling property has beautiful pool villas. It’s also well located


for visiting Palawan Beach and Universal Studios. From £545 per room per night. capellahotels.com


Ibis Singapore on Bencoolen


This more central option is


just a bamboo bike ride away from Orchard Road, where clients will find plenty of retail and dining options. From £80 per room per night. all.accor.com


to Malaysia, and is lined with restored heritage sites such as the Bukit Timah station, which dates back to the early 1900s and will soon have a café in the Station Master’s Quarters.


At times, it feels as though I’m


cycling through a rainforest. The route skirts numerous nature reserves, including Bukit Timah, which boasts more tree species than North America, and at one point, I come close to cycling over a monitor lizard as it scrambles across the path.


COASTAL ROUTES Another gem is Singapore’s Park Connector Network (PCN), a 186-mile tangle of cycling routes. One of the newest sections is the Changi Bay PC, which connects to the East Coastal PC. I start my pedal-powered exploration of the route near Gardens by the Bay, riding along a path that weaves through linear coastal parks filled with monkeys and otters. I’m pretty weary by the time I


reach the section that loops around Changi airport (where a fifth terminal


50 8 DECEMBER 2022


Cycling is easy


in Singapore, with motor vehicles giving bikes a wide berth


will be built by 2025). But spurred on by the change in scenery, I follow the section that traces Singapore’s northern side and soon the forested coastline of Malaysia’s Johor state floats into view. The extent of the PCN makes it a fantastic way to explore Singapore, whether you’re hopping from Gardens by the Bay to Merlion Park, where the mythical merlion previously stood in the shadow of The Fullerton Hotel, or tackling longer stretches, such as the one connecting downtown to leafy neighbourhoods like Queenstown, with its history-filled Queenstown Heritage Trail. And then there’s Sentosa Island, famed for its theme parks and historical sites (Fort Siloso became Singapore’s 74th national monument in 2022). My advice?


Base yourself at the Capella Singapore, which recently joined forces with the Brompton bike company, and pedal along the cycle paths that hug the island’s shoreline. You’ll find the hotel near Sentosa’s southern coastline, which is lusher than the theme park-filled centre, and the hotels here have direct access to bike routes. It’s hardly surprising that Raffles chose this area for its new property, Raffles Sentosa Resort, Singapore’s first all-villa hotel.


RULES OF THE ROAD Cycling is easy in Singapore too. There are fewer cars (it’s the world’s most expensive place to own one) and motorised vehicles give bikes a wide berth, while double-decker buses sound a polite double-toot of the horn when approaching cyclists. On Singapore’s smooth, wide and well-maintained bike paths, the speed limit is generally fixed at 10km per hour – a limit worth heeding, unless you want to fall foul of the speed gun-wielding officers who keep cyclists in check.


Saddling up is also easy. Bike


hire kiosks line PCN routes, and there are two fantastic bike share schemes: Anywheel, the preferred option for tourists, and SG Bike, which requires a local sim card, but will soon be accessible to all. A growing number of hotels have their own fleets of bicycles too, including downtown’s Ibis Singapore on Bencoolen, which offers bikes made from bamboo, and is a short bike ride from the Maxwell Food Centre, one of Singapore’s top hawker centres. Which leads me to another


reason to saddle up in Singapore – the ability to offset any over- indulgences by simply cycling to your favourite restaurant. At least, that’s what I’m telling myself.


TW BOOK IT


Abercrombie & Kent offers three nights’ B&B at Capella Singapore from £2,999 based on two people sharing a Premier Seaview King Bed Room. Includes flights and private transfers. abercrombiekent.co.uk


travelweekly.co.uk


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