Club Tampines West, Singapore. Photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.
Problem
How do you give brief but useful information about a Community Club in Singapore or anywhere?
First, how do you find it? Google maps. The map on the nearby MRT station. Look for a large building with the sign club outside.
Answer
I wrote this about Braddell Heights Community Club in Singapore and the nearby MRT underground station.
DIRECTIONS
From Serangoon MRT take escalators to exit F (fewer escalators than the other set of escalators which exit to the shopping mall). Along the corridor you emerge by bus stops. The Community Centre (changed name to Community Club in 2018 to sound more friendly) is a large building, same side, to your right, on the corner. Compact building with office, signboards and lift the lobby.
ACTIVITIES
Open to all. Non-members pay slightly more. Many activities are courses such as martial arts, Lion Dance group, singing, crafts, for children or adults, seasonal events. However, you can often drop into either the Mandarin speaking Toastmasters' International speaking club or one of the three English speaking Toastmasters clubs held on three of the five Saturday afternoons each month.
EATING
No eating place is inside but a hawker centre is diagonally across the road junction beyond the HDB housing block; or go back to Nex shopping mall beside Serangoon MRT railway station.
I could say much more for the Google reader, but the text would be too long for Google browsers. What else have I not said? This community club is one of my two favourites, because of its nearness to the MRT (trains every three to five minutes) and the number of English language activities. My other favourite is Cairnhill, near Newton MRT, with about nine English language Toastmasters clubs plus one Mandarin and one bilingual English and Malay.
You could also check out the Community clubs website which lists the clubs all over Singapore.
PHOTO
I am in two minds about putting up a photo.
Inside the atrium of Braddell Heights Community Club. Photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.
Useful Websites (Alphabetically by country)
EUROPE / GERMANY
The Rathaus, not a rat house but what we in the UK call a town hall. Normally the historic building is on the main square of each city. The big basement with columns and carvings usually has a bustling cafeteria serving reasonably-priced local food. Signs on walls and tables tell you about activities and local events.
Bremen town hall or Rathaus. Source Wikipedia article on Bremen. Photo by Pederec.
I remember that Bremen in north Germany has a typical, striking basement cafeteria.
In France the town hall is called the hotel de ville.
SINGAPORE
https://www.pa.gov.sg/our-network/community-clubs
TOURIST INFORMATION
https://www.visitsingapore.com/see-do-singapore/socialiser/?cmp=SEM_LEISURE-EATDRINK-NIGHTLIFE
SINGAPORE AIRLINES
singaporeair. com
CLUBS
toastmastersinternational.com/find-a-club
UK
Cities have events and activities in town halls, Arts Centres, churches, church halls, colleges, public libraries, pubs (the whole pub or a room upstairs), restaurants, schools, and theatres. Look for the free newspapers in racks outside railway stations, in Tourist Information Centres,
and in supermarkets and outside newsagents and the shops of estate agents (property agents).
USA
Just google 'community centres near me' and you will get suggestions for each city.
Author
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker. Please share links to your favourite posts.
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