Hillview, Singapore

Hillview
Name transcription(s)
 • Chinese山景
 • MalayBukit Pemandangan
 • Tamilஹில்வியூ
Hume Avenue overlooking Bukit Timah Hill
Hume Avenue overlooking Bukit Timah Hill
Hillview is located in Singapore
Hillview
Hillview
Location of Hillview within Singapore
Coordinates: 1°21′44.2″N 103°45′53.2″E / 1.362278°N 103.764778°E / 1.362278; 103.764778
Country Singapore
Population
(2019)
 • Total19,120

Hillview (Chinese: 山景) is located in Upper Bukit Timah, Northwest Singapore. The neighbourhood overlooks Bukit Timah Hill, hence its name.

Ecology

Hillview is set amongst lush greenery- encircled by the woodlands of Bukit Gombak to the west, Bukit Batok Nature Park to the south and Bukit Timah Nature Reserve to the east. Near it are several other nature parks, such as Hindhede Nature Park, Dairy Farm Nature Park, Chestnut Nature Park, and Rifle Range Nature Park.

History

Industrial Past

From the early 1940s to the late 80s, Hillview was an industrial precinct with facilities such as the Old Ford Motor Factory (built in 1941), Castrol Oil Company, Union Carbide, Cycle & Carriage Daimler-Benz car assembly plant (built in 1965) and Hume Pipe Company factory (lease in Hume Avenue granted in 1927). Today, only the Old Ford Motor factory remains, as the other factories have made way for private residential developments.

The KTM Malayan Railway used to operate passenger and freight services that ran through Hillview, from Malaysia in the north to Tanjong Pagar railway station in the south. Of significance are two railway truss bridges spanning across the undulating terrain near Hillview. Under a bilateral agreement signed between Singapore and Malaysia in 2010, the railway land was handed back to Singapore. Since then, the railway land has largely been kept untouched and actively redeveloped as a green corridor, with access points being gradually added throughout the 24-km stretch of land. It includes a new bridge over Hillview Road slated to be completed in 2024.

Second World War

Located just beside Bukit Timah Hill, the area witnessed one of the fiercest military encounters in Singapore during World War II as Bukit Timah held strategic and tactical importance to both the Japanese and the British. The Ford Motor Factory most notably served as the venue for the formal surrender of the Malayan Peninsula by the British Commanding Officer, Lt-Gen. Arthur Ernest Percival, to the Japanese Commander of the 25th Army, Gen. Yamashita Tomoyuki on 15 February 1942.

Infrastructure

Apartments along Hillview Avenue

Princess Elizabeth Estate, which was previously located along Hillview Avenue's Elizabeth Drive, was built around 1951 to commemorate the wedding of Princess Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth II) to Prince Philip (the Duke of Edinburgh) in 1947.

There was also public housing built by the Housing Development Board (HDB) around 1979 at the north end of Hillview, with a community centre, a wet market, a hawker centre and some neighbourhood shops. In 1999, the government announced that the HDB estate would be relocated to Bukit Gombak via the largest Selective En-bloc Redevelopment Scheme (SERS). The residents started the relocation in 2003-2005. By late 2005, the last HDB estate was demolished.

Hillview is now an affluent private residential enclave comprised of condominiums and landed properties. It is well-served by restaurants, delicatessens, watering holes, cafes, convenience stores and suburban shopping mall, HillV2. The Hillview Community Club, located close to the Hillview MRT station, opened in 2019.

Hillview is serviced by the Hillview MRT station on the Downtown line. To coincide with the new Rail Corridor and reinvention of Old Bukit Timah Fire Station, Hume MRT station will be opening in 2025. Construction to extend Dairy Farm Road into Hillview Rise to enable an alternative direct route into Hillview is in progress. There is also an upcoming commercial development at No.2 Hillview Road where the old Standard Chartered Building was.


This page was last updated at 2024-03-17 14:34 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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