Stunning Singapore on two wheels

A cycling tour hits all the highlights in the city-state

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Not quite hitting F1 speed, we nonetheless pedal onto the racetrack, giddy with our starting position.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 20/04/2024 (565 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Not quite hitting F1 speed, we nonetheless pedal onto the racetrack, giddy with our starting position.

You see, our group of ragtag tourists is on Let’s Go’s Historical Singapore Bike Tour and one of the highlights is cycling at the starting line of the Formula 1 Singapore Grand Prix.

Of course, we’re on utilitarian city cruiser bikes, not in supercharged F1 race cars, but the elation is real.

Steve MacNaull/Winnipeg Free Press
                                Our Let’s Go bike tour covers part of Formula 1 Singapore Grand Prix racetrack.

Steve MacNaull/Winnipeg Free Press

Our Let’s Go bike tour covers part of Formula 1 Singapore Grand Prix racetrack.

The racetrack is underneath, the Formula 1 Singapore Grand Prix sign looms large overhead, the famous Marina Bay is to one side and the glimmering skyline of this city-state is on the other. Plus, our tour guide, Melvyn Yap, is making us laugh — again.

Just before gliding onto the F1 course, he tells us Singaporeans aren’t very athletic.

Steve MacNaull photo
                                Our tour guide Melvin Yap is as funny as he is informative.

Steve MacNaull photo

Our tour guide Melvin Yap is as funny as he is informative.

In fact, the nation’s favourite sports are eating, lining up for things and jumping to conclusions.

Over the four-hour, 14-kilometre tour, Yap will make other humorous quips to keep us entertained and informed as we cycle past the shophouses and back alley bars of Kampong Glam, through the Civic and Central Business districts, along the Singapore River and around Marina Bay.

Most of the pedalling is on sidewalks and even through a shopping mall and the lobby of an office highrise.

Yap says that’s because land is at a premium in densely populated Singapore (six million people on an island 55-by-23 kilometres) and there’s no room for anything as frivolous as bike lanes.

He also tells us about “Asia Lite,” the nickname for Singapore and its notoriety for operating in English and everything being organized, orderly, clean, modern and on time.

“Don’t worry, we still also have plenty of time to be superstitious, fuss about feng shui and be traditional,” says Yap.

My wife, Kerry, and I find ourselves being Crazy Not-Rich Cauasians (the hit movie Crazy Rich Asians was set in the city-state) because Air Canada has just started to fly between Vancouver and Singapore.

Steve MacNaull/Winnipeg Free Press
                                Cycling along the Singapore River.

Steve MacNaull/Winnipeg Free Press

Cycling along the Singapore River.

We’ve always wanted to experience this tiny nation, so we boarded the Air Canada flight — the longest one the airline does, at 16 hours and 10 minutes and the only non-stop link between Canada and Singapore.

The flight on the quick, quiet and comfortable Dreamliner 787 is already a success, attracting a mix of business, tourist and visiting-friends-and-family passengers.

We jam as much as we can into six days, wandering around the Gardens by the Bay with its futuristic Supertree sculptures, hanging out with white tigers and feeding a rhinoceros at the Night Safari, lounging at Coastes Beach Club on Sentosa Island, riding a bumboat up and down the Singapore River and shopping in supermalls along glitzy Orchard Road.

Our respites after long days of sightseeing are the two Pan Pacific hotels in Singapore — the one at Marina Bay and the one just off Orchard Road.

Both have comfy beds in well-designed rooms, resort-style pool complexes and Pacific Club Lounges with views for Champagne breakfasts, afternoon teas and happy hours.

Pan Pacific near Marina Bay is the Singapore-based hotel chain’s original property — a 38-storey landmark with 790 rooms and subtle Asian style.

Lounging at Coastes Beach Club on Sentosa Island is a must.

Lounging at Coastes Beach Club on Sentosa Island is a must.

Pan Pacific Orchard is a new design hotel just off the famous shopping street that resembles a Jenga tower, covered in foliage with four terraces scooped out of the building at the second, fifth, 11th and 18th floors for the outdoor lobby, pool, cabana lawn and outdoor convention space, respectively.

We’ll also do some hotel hopping for eats and drinks — afternoon tea in the Courtyard at the historic Fullerton Hotel, sunset drinks at Lantern rooftop bar at the new Fullerton Bay Hotel and pre-dinner signature cocktails at Origin Bar in the Shangri-la Hotel before dinner at Origin’s Australian-style steakhouse with a new menu of ribeye and tenderloin cuts.

Check out www.aircanada.com and www.panpacific.com.

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