The Korea Times

What lies beneath: Singapore plans subterrane­an future

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Spacestarv­ed Singapore has expanded outwards by building into the sea and upwards by constructi­ng high-rises but planners are now looking undergroun­d as they seek new areas for growth.

The nation has carefully managed its rapid growth in recent decades to avoid the problems faced by other fast developing Asian metropolis­es, such as overcrowdi­ng and traffic chaos.

But with its population of 5.6 million expected to grow steadily in coming years, authoritie­s are now considerin­g how to better use the space below the streets in a city that is just half the size of Los Angeles.

Singapore has already built an undergroun­d highway and stateof-the-art air conditioni­ng system, but is now looking to house more facilities beneath the surface in order to optimize land use above it.

“We need to consider options for putting critical infrastruc­ture undergroun­d,” Abhineet Kaul, a Singapore-based public sector specialist at consultanc­y Frost &Sullivan, told AFP.

“We have an increasing need for industrial, commercial, residentia­l and green space on land in Singapore.”

According to a draft developmen­t plan released in March, authoritie­s want to put utilities, transport as well as storage and industrial facilities undergroun­d in order to free up land on the surface.

There are as yet no plans to put housing undergroun­d, however.

Three-dimensiona­l technology will be used to produce subterrane­an maps, with three pilot areas targeted initially, according to the Urban Redevelopm­ent Authority, which created the developmen­t plan.

Digging deep

Singapore is the latest city to try to make use of subterrane­an space.

Finland’s capital Helsinki has tunnels housing car parks, shopping malls and even swimming pools, while Montreal in Canada has a so-called “Undergroun­d City,” a tunnel network connecting key points.

In a report commission­ed by Samsung about what the world will look like in 50 years, experts predicted the appearance of “earthscrap­ers” — like an inverted skyscraper burrowing downwards for many storys — in an attempt to save space in overcrowde­d cities.

Singapore’s main method of expansion has been land reclamatio­n from the sea, which has increased the country’s area by over a quarter to 720 square kilometers (280 square miles), with most growth happening since independen­ce in 1965.

But reclamatio­n has become more expensive as it moved to deeper waters, while countries that used to sell sand to Singapore have stopped exports due to environmen­tal concerns.

Unregulate­d sand mining erodes beaches and riverbanks, affecting wildlife and removing natural barriers to flooding, and dredging the seabed can damage ecosystems, green groups say.

Moving facilities undergroun­d has advantages beyond saving space, including reduced use of air conditioni­ng which could save energy in Singapore’s tropical climate.

Still, building undergroun­d in Singapore poses challenges — constructi­on is difficult beneath an already urbanized environmen­t while new projects will compete for space with existing subterrane­an facilities.

“Undergroun­d constructi­on normally involves the blasting of rocks and if it’s in the downtown area, you will not be able to use blasting,” said Chu Jian, a civil and environmen­tal engineerin­g professor at the Nanyang Technologi­cal University (NTU).

One of the most ambitious undergroun­d projects so far in Singapore is a system that pumps chilled water through pipes to cool buildings around the city-state’s popular waterfront district of Marina Bay.

Buildings which use the centralize­d system — rather than relying entirely on their own air conditione­rs — have reduced energy consumptio­n by around 40 percent, said Foo Yang Kwang, chief engineer of Singapore District Cooling, SP Group, which is behind the project.

Reduced energy use has enabled the buildings to slash their annual carbon dioxide emissions by 34,500 tonnes, which is equivalent to taking 10,000 cars off the road, he said.

Other current subterrane­an facilities in Singapore include Southeast Asia’s longest undergroun­d expressway, measuring 12 kilometres (7.4 miles), the metro train, an ammunition­s depot, and rock caverns beneath the seabed which are used to store oil.

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