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Kallang Airport

Kallang Airport was Singapore's first purpose-built civil international airport. Officially opened on 12 June 1937 and closed on 21 August 1955, it was located along the eastern edge of the Kallang Basin and spanned the modern planning areas of Kallang and Geylang. Constructed on 300 acres (120 ha) of reclaimed mangrove swampland, the airport featured facilities for seaplanes and was once regarded as "the finest airport in the British Empire", with Amelia Earhart calling it "an aviation miracle of the East". Though its official opening was in 1937, the first aircraft had landed at the airport in 1935.

History
{{quote box Naming Kallang Airport got its name from the nearby Kallang Basin, which was named after a group of sea-gypsies living around the area in the 1800s. On 11 February 1930, the Dutch Airline KLM operated the first service flight between Amsterdam and Batavia (now Jakarta), landing at Seletar with a Dutch-made Fokker trimotor monoplane carrying 8 passengers and a cargo of fresh fruit, flowers and mail. This marked the beginning of commercial civil aviation in Singapore. KLM later introduced a regular Amsterdam to Batavia flight service in late 1931. Two years later, in July 1933, Imperial Airways, the flagship airline of the British empire at the time, started a service between London and Darwin via Cairo, Karachi, Calcutta, Singapore and Jakarta. This service was later extended to Brisbane and operated jointly with Qantas on 17 December 1934. Booming commercial aviation traffic led to congestion at the existing Seletar Airbase (today's Seletar Airport), creating a need for a new airport. On 31 August 1931, Cecil Clementi, Governor of the Straits Settlements, announced that Kallang Basin as the location for the new civil aerodrome suitable for land planes and seaplanes, and relieving Seletar of commercial flight activities. This place was chosen over other possible sites because of its proximity to the city centre as well as its location next to the Kallang Basin, which allowed seaplanes to land. Construction aircraft gracing the Kallang Airport runway, with the control tower standing tall in the background '' on 13 June 1937, reporting on the opening of Kallang Airport by Governor Shenton Thomas Reclamation work began on the 103 hectares of a tidal swamp in Kallang Basin in 1932. Seven million cubic metres of earth were used for the filling of this tidal swamp. By 1936, all reclamation and consolidation of land were completed, forming a 915-metre diameter, dome-shaped landing ground. On 12 June 1937, the Kallang Aerodrome was officially opened by Shenton Thomas, who had taken over the governorship of the Straits Settlements from Cecil Clementi in 1934. At the time it was hailed as "the finest airport in the British Empire", with facilities that were considered revolutionary. The circular aerodrome allowed planes to land from any direction, and the slipway allowed seaplanes to be served at the same terminal building as regular planes. Wearne's Air Service promptly initiated its Malaya internal air service on June 28, 1937, leveraging the advanced infrastructure of the newly unveiled Kallang Aerodrome. World War II When the Japanese launched their invasion of Malaya and Singapore on 8 December 1941, Kallang was the principal fighter airfield. By January 1942, it was the only operational fighter airfield in Singapore, as the other airfields (Tengah, Seletar and Sembawang) were within range of Japanese artillery at Johor Bahru. Brewster Buffalo fighters of 243 Squadron RAF, 488 Squadron RNZAF and a detachment of 2-VLG-V of the Royal Netherlands East Indies Air Force operated from the airfield, defending Singapore from repeated Japanese air raids. They were joined later by Hawker Hurricanes of 232 Squadron RAF, but attrition took a steady toll on men and machines, and by the last days of January 1942, the airfield had been badly damaged by the bombing and only a small number of aircraft were serviceable. The last of the fighters left in early February, escaping to carry on the fight just before Singapore was surrendered to the advancing Japanese. Air Headquarters Malaya Communication Squadron RAF was formed here. The war years and after The growth in aviation traffic was stunted during the war years, a period which saw the landing circle being converted into a single runway to allow use by warplanes. The British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC) and Qantas resumed their regular services to the airport, while the resurrected local airline Malayan Airways (MAL) began services on 1 May 1947. In the early 1950s, the increasing size of aircraft and the need for longer runways resulted in it being extended beyond Mountbatten Road in the eastern boundary of the facility into what is now Old Airport Road. The new runway was long and wide. This necessitated the installation of traffic lights to halt vehicular traffic every time a plane took off or landed. ==Photo gallery==
Photo gallery
File:Kallang Airport runway 1945.jpg|1945 aerial photo of Kallang Airport's runway File:Kallang Airport and Basin area 1945.jpg|1945 aerial photo of Kallang Airport runway and ramp, as well as Kallang Basin area File:Kallang Airport aerial photo 1945.jpg|1945 aerial photo of Kallang Airport runway, ramp and terminal building, as well as Kallang Basin area File:67 Squadron Buffaloes.jpg|Brewster Buffalo Mk Is being re-assembled inside a hangar at Kallang in March 1941 File:Kallang 1941.jpg|The main hangar in 1941 File:Brewster Buffalo of No. 488 Squadron, 1941.jpg|Buffalo Mk I of No. 488 Squadron RNZAF, 1941 File:Japanese Kawasaki Ki-45 Toryu aircraft at Kallang Airport, Singapore - 194509.jpg|Abandoned Japanese Kawasaki Ki-45 fighters during the liberation of Singapore File:Evacuation of British POWs, Kallang Airport, Singapore - 19450908.jpg|The first British prisoners of war to be evacuated from Singapore after liberation walk to their aircraft File:RAF Liberator aircraft at Kallang Airport, Singapore - 194509.jpg|Royal Air Force personnel pass in front of a B-24 Liberator aircraft at Kallang airport, Singapore, in 1945–46 File:Kallang Airport, 360 degree view.webm|Video taken in January 2021 ==Accidents and incidents==
Accidents and incidents
• On 7 November 1941, a Royal Air Force Tiger Moth piloted by Flight Lieutenant Alec Wills was hit from behind by a landing Buffalo of 243 Squadron, resulting in Wills' death. • On 29 June 1946, one of the Dakota aircraft belonging to the Royal Air Force Police with 20 NCOs on board crashed at the airport in a storm with no survivors. • On 13 March 1954, a BOAC Lockheed Constellation, G-ALAM Belfast carrying mail crashed while attempting to land at Kallang Airport en route to London from Sydney. The accident killed 32 people, including eight crew members. An investigation of the incident found that the most probable cause of the crash was pilot fatigue, but there was a serious problem of "inadequate response of the fire and rescue services". This remains the worst flight disaster in Singapore. ==Legacy==
Legacy
Several pieces of local infrastructure pay homage to the former airport. The old runway near Mountbatten Road is now called Old Airport Road. The surrounding public flats are named the Old Kallang Airport Estate. The estate is served by the Dakota MRT station, which took its name from the Dakot- DC-3 aircraft which used to land at the Kallang Airport. Two new roads near Kallang MRT station have been named "Kallang Airport Drive" and "Kallang Airport Way". In addition, Old Terminal Lane, which links Geylang Road with Kallang Airport Way, references the Kallang Airport's conserved terminal building. The slipway for seaplanes was occupied by the Oasis Building, a structure built on the Kallang Basin. The terminal building itself was used as the headquarters of the People's Association until 9 April 2009, when it moved to its new headquarters at King George's Avenue. The PA building held many activities for the ruling People's Action Party, ranging from school visits to social events. Kallang Airport was gazetted for conservation on 5 December 2008 by the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) of Singapore. ==Architecture==
Architecture
The original Terminal Building is an iconic modernist building with Art Deco-style railings and columns by Frank Dorrington Ward. The international style is also visible in this building as a radical simplification of form, lack of ornaments, using transparent materials which make the building visually lighter; also the clear division of functions. There is a circular glass control tower in the centre, and there are two side blocks, the former terminal building, with an open-air viewing deck on the top floor. The People's Association kept the concrete structure and transparent glazed walls and repaired the façade, closed the gates, and rebuilt the window on the second floor for reshaping the interior space for the use of offices. ==See also==
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