Joo Chiat Road and Changi Road junction.
My favourite gorent pisang (banana fritters) stall was in the coffee shop at the corner of Joo Chiat Road and Geylang Road. It was within walking distance from my house. The hawker's operating hours were very short. Customers who went there late were disappointed. There was no queque like we see today. People just crowded round his stall.
The sidelane between the 2 blocks of buildings were selling only muslim cooked food. A variety of Malay food were sold there such as satay, mee rebus, soto ayam, lonton and other cooked food. There was no piped water supply and no washing area. The hygiene was very poor and yet nobody complained.
Source: National Archives of Singapore
The shop was originally selling charcoal. Due to poor business, an illegal shed was constructed in front of the shop to sell fancy fish and birds. The owner also had a similar stall at the side wall of Hollywood Theatre.
Joo Chiat Road towards Changi Road
Old timers living in Joo Chiat should remember that fronting this house was a hawker stall selling Hainanese satay and porridge at night till very late. It was an icon in Joo Chiat Road at night in those bygone days.
Joo Chiat Road shophouses before
The same site now without the shophouses
The background shows the Joo Chiat Complex multi-storey carpark. The open air Lily Cinema was located there. Movie goers had to sit on hard wooden benches. It was free sitting and seats were reserved by tying handkerchiefs to the benches. I had a friend living behind the cinema. His father had erected a timber platform high enough to watch the show. It was meant for his family members but friends and neighbours also went there to see the movie. As a result, it was always crowded. I went there only when I could not get a ticket to the cinema. They are all but a memory now.
8 comments:
Thanks for your interesting post!
you are welcome.
Hi Philip,
Always great to view pictures of places in the 60s. I remember travelling with my little Vespa in the Joo Chiat area then. Not too many cars and you could just park the scooter anywhere.
A friend lived at Chiku Road and we scootered to the beach behind the Roxy Cinema.
Cheers.
Andy
Hi Andy, since you were a regular at Chiku Road, did you notice the people gathering at the corner coffee shop? They were watching expert dum players. 'Dum' is a popular local board game now play by senior citizens at most coffee shops in HDB heartland.
Hi Philip,
Thanks for reply. Yes I did see these people playing dum. In fact I was asking a friend about table billiards. Remember where we used sticks to hit round wooden tablets into 4 holes at the corner of the table?
What do you call it in English?
Andy
Andy, are you referring to snooker?
Yes, Philip it could be snooker but it had a Hokkien name which sounded like,"soot chee". Could be the local version of snooker. Wish I had pictures to post to you.
Cheers,
Andy
Hi Mr Chew,
I'm really glad to chance upon your blog today. Thank you for putting up this blog. It allows the younger generation to get to know more about the past... and the good old days...
As my grandfather passed away years before I was even born, I didn't have the chance to hear from him any good old tales of Joo Chiat area.
May I know if you happen to have any photo of the old Lily Cinema which u've mentioned in your blog too? I am really curious how it used to look...
Warmest regards,
Eliza
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