Type: | Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) station |
Address: | 701 Telok Blangah Road Singapore 109029 |
Other: | Bus, Taxi |
Structure: | Underground |
Platform: | 2 (1 island platform) |
Levels: | 1 |
Tracks: | 2 |
Parking: | Yes (PSA Building) |
Bicycle: | Yes |
Passengers: | 5,818 per day[1] |
Pass Year: | June 2024 |
Electrified: | Yes |
Accessible: | Yes |
Operator: | SMRT Trains Ltd (SMRT Corporation) |
Former: | Alexandra, Tanjong Berlayar[2] [3] |
Map Type: | Singapore Rail central area |
Map Dot Label: | Labrador Park |
Map Alt: | Singapore MRT/LRT system map |
Map Size: | 300px |
Labrador Park MRT station is an underground Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) station on the Circle line, located within Bukit Merah planning area, Singapore.
Built underneath Telok Blangah Road near the junctions of Alexandra Road and Labrador Villa Road, this station was named after the nearby Labrador Nature Reserve. It is the nearest MRT station to the PSA Building and Gillman Barracks, the latter of which is now home to numerous art galleries.
This station is named after Labrador Park, a historical site which held former fortifications and naval guns built by the British forces in Singapore before World War II. Another name is also Tanjong Berlayer. It is the name given to the craggy granite outcrop that formerly stood in the gateway of Keppel Harbour in Singapore. The rocky outcrop served as navigational aids to ancient mariners sailing through the swift waters of the narrow channel between them, but was subsequently destroyed by the British in 1848 to widen the channel for larger vessels to sail through. In 2005, a symbolic replica was erected by the Singapore government near its original site to mark the role in the history. It was also called Batu Berlayar in Malay, Dragon's Teeth Gate in English and Long Ya Men in Chinese.
The artwork featured in this station under the Art in Transit programme is Without Which/Would Have Been/Impossible by Heman Chong. The art piece, located on the side of the lift shaft in the station, consists of the title of the piece and several coloured circles of different sizes arranged in a regular fashion. According to the artist, the motif came from a "microscopic view of a single rock" found at Labrador Park, highlighting the park's distinctive identity as the last surviving rocky sea cliff in Singapore.[4]