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Earlier planned Singapore Underground Road System no longer needed

  Published: 29 August 2017

As Singapore shifts towards a car-lite society, land previously safeguarded for the Singapore Underground Road System (SURS) will be de-safeguarded with effect from today.

A car-lite city centre

The SURS was conceptualised in the late 1980s as a 15km long underground arterial ring road system around the fringe of the city, to cater to potential traffic growth into and out of the city centre. Land along the SURS alignment was safeguarded in 1993. Please refer to the Annex [PDF, 320kb] for the SURS alignment.

Enhancements to our public transport network and changes in land use policies have removed the need for SURS. The city centre is well-served by a comprehensive public transport network and the full opening of the Downtown Line on 21 October this year will further improve public transport connectivity, especially for commuters travelling from the north-western and eastern regions of the island to the Central Business District (CBD) and Marina Bay areas. When completed in 2024, the Thomson-East Coast Line will connect commuters in the northern and eastern parts of Singapore to the heart of the city, while Circle Line Stage 6 will close the loop for the Circle Line by around 2025. By 2030, our rail network will be 360km long, and more than 90 per cent of developments in the CBD will be within a five-minute walk to an MRT station.

 As part of our polycentric development strategy, the Government has also been growing more commercial centres in different regions outside the city. This brings employment and amenities closer to homes, thereby reducing the need for travel into and out of the city centre.

With the SURS no longer needed, land which had been safeguarded for SURS will be de-safeguarded, giving previously affected land owners greater flexibility in their development plans.

 

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