Our Tampines Hub Explained

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Our Tampines Hub
Former Names:Tampines Town Hub
Location:Tampines, Singapore
Address:1 Tampines Walk, Singapore 528523
Building Type:Mixed-use development
Architect:DP Architects Pte Ltd
Architectural Style:Sustainable architecture
Floor Count:7
Status:Completed
Cost:S$500 million
Owner:People's Association
Website:https://www.ourtampineshub.sg/
Grounds Area:5.3 hectares
Embedded:
Town Square (Stadium)
Surface:Artificial turf
Capacity:5,000
Tenants:Tampines Rovers (2018–present)
Geylang International (2019–present)
Publictransit: Tampines

Our Tampines Hub (abbreviated as OTH) is an integrated community and lifestyle building in Tampines, Singapore. It is located on the grounds of the former Tampines Stadium and Tampines Sports Hall and is part of the development of the Tampines Regional Centre.[1]

Built based on feedback from 15,000 residents living in the vicinity, the complex was officially opened by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong on 6 August 2017.[2] The current multi-purpose complex replaced the former Tampines Stadium, Tampines Sports Hall, Tampines Swimming Complex, the Housing and Development Board (HDB) Tampines Branch Office and the Tampines Regional Library, housing them under one roof.

History

Our Tampines Hub occupies the grounds of the former sports facilities of Tampines Stadium and Tampines Sports Hall, which was opened in December 1989 in conjunction with the adjacent Tampines Swimming Complex.[3] This coincided with the HDB's plan for opening sporting facilities new housing estates in the late eighties. Tampines Stadium was also the home stadium of the Singapore Premier League club, Tampines Rovers.

Plans for a new proposed integrated lifestyle town hub development to be built on the site of Tampines Stadium and Tampines Sports Hall were unveiled on 21 January 2011, and was part of the Tampines Masterplan for 2011–2015.[4]

On 11 May 2013, a groundbreaking ceremony led by Members of Parliament for Tampines GRC was held at the former Tampines Stadium for what was to be for an integrated-community and sports facility on what was then known as Tampines Town Hub.[5] By July that year, Tampines Stadium had been completely demolished.[6] [7] Construction commenced on 1 June 2014.[8]

The official name of "Tampines Town Hub" was unveiled as Our Tampines Hub on 30 August 2015 with more than 2,000 residents in attendance. Residents also received updates and progress on the features and facilities offered.[9] Residents also had a chance to vote and decide on the hub's logo. OTH opened in three phases starting from November 2016, becoming fully operational by 6 August 2017.

Video Assistant Referee

The Video Assistant Referee (VAR) technology will feature for the first time in Singapore league history, starting from the upcoming 2023 season of the Singapore Premier League

Our Tampines Hub have been retrofitted with remote cameras that relay the feeds back to the FAS headquarters in Jalan Besar which is operated centrally by a three-man team in the Production Control Room 2, which is the second such facility at the stadium. The VAR will have access to all the camera angles in the stadium and the Control Room can get these angles to check for any kind of situation from live speed to slow motion. New pitch-side camera systems that allow up to 40-time zoom have been installed, while network connectivity has been improved to deliver enhanced reliability and a smoother viewing experience. With VAR serving as extra pairs of eyes on the pitch, local football authorities hope to reduce bad refereeing calls, such as when a goal is wrongly disallowed for offside.

On 21 April 2024, Starhub organised a football event between players from the English Premier League and the Singapore national football team, including John Arne Riise, Teddy Sheringham, Dwight Yorke, David James, Emile Heskey, Jermaine Pennant, Wes Brown, Djibril Cisse, Glen Johnson, David Thompson, Dion Dublin, Keith Gillespie and Patrik Berger.

Facilities

The building houses six different swimming pools that satisfy families as well as sportspeople, one of which is the largest rooftop pool in Singapore. It also houses a 5000square feet playground and the Tampines Regional Library.[2]

Public Services Centre

OTH features a Public Services Centre, where residents have access to government services and assistance at a common location.[10] It houses a 24/7 e-service lobby offering services from six different agencies: namely People's Association, North East Community Development Council, Housing Development Board, Workforce Singapore, Ministry of Social and Family Development, and ActiveSG.[11]

Town Square

Formerly known as Tampines Stadium, the main feature of OTH, the Town Square is a 5,100 seater stadium with a FIFA-endorsed "2 Star Quality Pro football pitch". The artificial turf can be used for both football and rugby matches, and also for other community events.

After 6 years of vacating Tampines Stadium for the construction of OTH, Tampines Rovers returned to their home ground with much fanfare.[12] The pitch saw its first football match in July 2017, with Tampines Rovers beating Brunei DPMM, 2–0. Tampines Rovers temporarily played at Clementi Stadium and Jurong West Stadium while OTH was under construction.[13]

In 2019, Geylang International FC moved to OTH and shared the stadium as home ground for the club also.[14]

With the redevelopment of The Float at Marina Bay, the Passing out parades of the Basic Military Training Centre are slated to be held there beginning 2023.

Team Sports Hall

OTH houses a public sports Hall. It can be rented out for a fee[15] and is sometimes used for the National School Games.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Our Tampines Hub - @About Our Tampines Hub. www.ourtampineshub.sg. 31 December 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171231212707/https://www.ourtampineshub.sg/our-tampines-hub/about-our-tampines-hub. 31 December 2017. dead.
  2. Web site: Our Tampines Hub opens, featuring arts theatre, rooftop pool, town's largest playground . Lee . Rachelle . 6 August 2017 . ChannelNewsAsia . 1 June 2018 .
  3. Web site: Tampines Sports Hall - Tampines - Singapore. Yelp.
  4. Web site: First-of-its-kind lifestyle hub in Tampines. www.asiaone.com.
  5. Web site: Tampines Tempo . Tampines Town Council . 1 June 2018.
  6. Web site: Tampines Stadium - Aik Sun Demolition & Engineering. aiksun.com.sg.
  7. Web site: Tampines Stadium Demolition. https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211222/3IFaBEhskKA . 22 December 2021 . live. Cheng Kiang Ng. 29 June 2013. YouTube.
  8. Web site: Construction of Tampines town hub starts. migration. 1 June 2014.
  9. Web site: TODAY Online - Tampines new town hub to open progressively.
  10. Web site: Six govt agencies under one roof at Tampines' new hub. hermes. 28 November 2016.
  11. Web site: Public services for everyone – all under one roof!.
  12. Web site: 30 April 2022 . Stadium stories: Our Tampines Hub, the brainchild of 15,000 residents . 19 December 2022 . AsiaOne . en.
  13. Web site: ‘Our Tampines Hub’ roars with football inside a shopping mall. Suresh. Nair. www.theindependent.sg.
  14. Web site: Eight clubs to share four stadiums for 2019 Singapore Premier League season, move 'not permanent': FAS . 14 August 2020.
  15. Web site: ActiveSG-Live better through Sport . 2024-04-23 . ActiveSG . en.