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Singapore's Chinatown is the traditional Chinese quarters of town, and while the entire city
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is largely Chinese these days the area does retain some of its own charm.
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Chinatown's primary attraction is the town itself, composed as it is of restored shophouses
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full of strange little shops selling everything from plastic Buddhas to dried seahorses. Wander
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at random and see what you can find!
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The central streets of Chinatown around the pagoda are packed with near-identical stalls
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selling all sorts of Chinese trinkets aimed squarely at tourists. There is also a cluster
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of (expensive) antique shops on South Bridge Rd. For Chinese handicrafts, antiques, fashion
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items, home accessories and Chinese medicine aimed more at the locals, poke into any of
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the numerous shopping malls.
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The area between Pagoda Street and Smith Street has been tarted up considerably for tourists,
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but workaday Chinatown continues south and east, merging seamlessly into the Central
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Business District. Tanjong Pagar is the unofficial home of Singapore's gay community, with many
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watering holes in restored shophouses, while Club Street and Ann Siang Hill caters more
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to the expat, yuppie and hipster crowd with small, intimate eateries offering excellent
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(if pricey) Western and modern Singaporean fare. Hence Chinatown is quite the paradox
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- simultaneously the gaudiest and trendiest district in Singapore.
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Chinatown is at its busiest and most colorful in the month preceding the Chinese New Year,
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when the streets are decked with festive decorations. Street markets are thronged with people, shows
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entertain the crowds and the drums of lion dances echo into the night. The festivities
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in a midnight countdown and a roar of firecrackers atop People's Park Complex, showering flaming
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confetti down below; and for the two following days virtually everything is closed.