The Shaw Organisation has a long history in Singapore since its founding in 1928. They bought the land on which the Shaw House now stands, in 1952. The plot of land was originally granted to William Scott in 1845. About 500,000 square feet of land was levelled to build the original Shaw House and the adjacent Lido Theatre. The company managed single-screen cinemas until the late 1980s, when it decided to build
cineplexes to give more flexibility in offering different types of films. The first cineplexes built were the Prince and Jade cineplexes in Shaw Towers, opened in February 1988. Cineplexes have now become the standard for cinemas offering varied shows for smaller crowds. The Shaw Organisation was founded in 1928 when Tan
Runme Shaw (1901–1985) arrived in Singapore from Shanghai. He was the third of seven children of a Shanghai textile merchant, Shaw Yuh Hsuen (1867–1920). In Shanghai, Runme's eldest brother
Runje Shaw had founded the
Tianyi Film Company (a.k.a Unique). Not satisfied with the domestic market, the Shaw brothers sought business opportunities elsewhere, especially in Southeast Asia. Runme, as distribution manager, was tasked to search for a suitable investment city. Runme's original destination was Indochina where he hoped to meet with the film distributors. However, he was denied permission to land there and instead, he ended up in Singapore, creating the Shaw Organisation. He was joined by his younger brother, Sir Run Run Shaw, two years later. After the
Great Depression, the Shaws decided to diversify their risk by branching out from their entertainment business into areas such as amusement parks. They brought in ideas from abroad and modelled the parks after those in Shanghai, which proved to be popular amongst the local population. From the mid-1930s to the 1980s, Shaw operated two popular fairgrounds – the
Great World Amusement Park and the
New World Amusement Park. At its height, the company owned multiple cinemas and amusement parks throughout Singapore,
Malaysia and
Borneo, and spawned
Shaw Brothers Studio in Hong Kong to feed its then-burgeoning operation. By August 2000, a computerised ticketing system, developed jointly with Singapore Computer Systems, was launched. This system linked all Shaw theatres into a single network for automated telephone credit card purchases. With its extensive infrastructure, Shaw is now the biggest distributor of Asian cinema. Today, it manages and runs 84 screens in 8 locations in Singapore. ==Business operations==