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Wikipedia

Circle MRT line

The Circle Line (CCL) is a medium-capacity Mass Rapid Transit line in Singapore. It runs in a loop from Dhoby Ghaut station in the city-centre to HarbourFront station in the south via Bishan station in the centre of the country. It also has a branch to Marina Bay station from Promenade station, which will be extended to HarbourFront station from 2026 to form a complete loop. Coloured orange on the rail map, the fully-underground line is approximately 35.5 kilometres (22.1 mi) long with 30 stations. Travelling from one end of the line to the other takes about an hour.


Circle Line
Overview
Native nameMalay: Laluan MRT Circle
Chinese: 地铁环线
Tamil: இணைப்பு எம்ஆர்டி வழி
StatusOperational
Under construction (Stage 6)
OwnerLand Transport Authority
LocaleSingapore
Termini
Stations30 (Operational)
3 (Under construction)
Service
TypeRapid transit
SystemMass Rapid Transit (Singapore)
Services3
Operator(s)SMRT Trains Ltd (SMRT Corporation)
Depot(s)Kim Chuan
Rolling stockAlstom Metropolis C830
Alstom Metropolis C830C
Alstom Metropolis C851E (Future)
Daily ridership225,561 (July 2020)[1]
History
Planned opening2026; 2 years' time (2026) (Stage 6)
Opened28 May 2009; 14 years ago (2009-05-28) (Stage 3)
17 April 2010; 14 years ago (2010-04-17) (Stages 1 and 2)
8 October 2011; 12 years ago (2011-10-08) (Stages 4 and 5)
14 January 2012; 12 years ago (2012-01-14) (Circle Line extension)
Technical
Line length35.5 km (22.1 mi) (Operational)
4 km (2.5 mi) (Under construction)
CharacterFully underground
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification750 V DC third rail
Operating speedlimit of 78 km/h (48 mph)
Route map

 CC16 
Marymount
 NS17 
Bishan
 CC15 
 CC17  TE9 
Caldecott
Lorong Chuan
 CC14 
Bukit Brown
(future station)
Serangoon
 CC13 
 NE12 
 DT19 
← to Bukit Panjang
to Expo
Bartley
 CC12 
 CC19 
Botanic Gardens
 CC20 
Farrer Road
Tai Seng
 CC11 
 CC21 
Holland Village
 EW21 
← to Bukit Panjang
to Expo
 DT26 
 CC22 
Buona Vista
MacPherson
 CC10 
 CC23 
one-north
 EW8 
 CC24 
Kent Ridge
Paya Lebar
 CC9 
 CC25 
Haw Par Villa
 CC26 
Pasir Panjang
Dakota
 CC8 
 CC27 
Labrador Park
Mountbatten
 CC7 
 CC28 
Telok Blangah
Stadium
 CC6 
Nicoll Highway
 CC5 
 NE1 
 CC29 
HarbourFront
 NE6 
Dhoby Ghaut
 CC1 
 NS24 
Bras Basah
 CC2 
 CC30 
Keppel
Esplanade
 CC3 
Promenade
 DT15  CC4 
 CC31 
Cantonment
Bayfront
 DT16  CE1 
Marina Bay
 NS27  CE2 
 CC32 
 TE20 

The line was the fourth MRT line to be opened on the network, with the first stage From Bartley to Marymount station commenced operations on 28 May 2009. The next stage to Dhoby Ghaut was completed on 17 April 2010 and the next stage to Harbourfront opened on 8 October 2011. A two-station extension to Marina Bay station was opened on 14 January 2012. The last stage of the line from Harbourfront to Marina Bay with stations at Keppel, Cantonment and Prince Edward Road will be completed in 2026, completing the loop.

It is the second line in Singapore after the North East Line to be completely automated and driverless and is among the world's longest driverless rapid transit lines.[2] It is also the first medium capacity line in Singapore, with each Circle Line train, the Alstom Metropolis C830 and C830C, having a three-car configuration.

History edit

Original plans edit

 
The Marina MRT line as announced in 1997; 18 stations were planned for the line.

The Circle Line dates back to 1989, when then Minister for Communications and Information, Yeo Ning Hong stated that such a system would be "feasible when the population reaches four million", noting the slow population growth and demand.[3]

Feasibility studies for the proposed line commenced on 11 October 1994. The line, then named the Marina Line, was first announced on 16 October 1997. The line would serve Marina Centre and the new downtown at Marina South, with multiple branches to Chinatown and Dhoby Ghaut via the National Stadium to either Kallang or Paya Lebar stations. The line was planned to have 18 stations, with a possible extension to Tanjong Pagar station.[4] Plans for the line were confirmed and approved by the government on 12 June 1998.[5] However, due to the high costs and lack of development in Marina South, the Chinatown branch was later removed in November 1999 and the line was reduced to 6 stations from the Dhoby Ghaut to Stadium stations.[6][7][8] A part of the removed leg later became part of the Downtown line.[9] On the other hand, a further extension towards Upper Paya Lebar was announced on 28 April 2001.[10]

The Marina line was eventually merged with a planned LRT line that goes from Paya Lebar to Buona Vista via Serangoon and Bishan to form Circle Line Stage 3 on 20 January 2003,[11] and subsequently Circle Line Stage 4 and 5 on 12 December 2003 when Stage 4 was extended from Buona Vista to World Trade Centre to close up the link and to provide connectivity from the west to Sentosa, becoming the Circle Line.[12][13] On 8 August 2001, SMRT won the bid and was appointed the operator of the Circle Line.[14] Names for the stations for the first three stages of the Circle line were finalised in July 2005 after the Land Transport Authority (LTA) conducted a public consultation exercise on the naming of stations.[15][16] In November 2005, the names of the stations in Stages 4 and 5 were finalised.[17][18][19]

Construction of the initial stages edit

 
The construction of Bishan station

Construction started on 13 March 2002 for Stage 1, 5 September 2002 for Stage 2, May 2003 for Stage 3, and January 2005 for Stages 4 and 5. Initially planned to be opened in stages from 2006 to 2010, at an estimated cost of S$6.7 billion, the Nicoll Highway collapse delayed the opening of the first stage to 2009. When the line fully opened on 8 October 2011, the cost of construction had risen to nearly S$10 billion.[20][21] Due to the collapse, the station was relocated to a new site two-thirds the size of the original 100 metres (330 ft) away.[22] Three stations on the Circle Line were initially designed as 'shell stations', but the decision was made to open two of them, Caldecott and Haw Par Villa (previously Thomson and West Coast respectively), leaving Bukit Brown as the only unopened station on the line.[20]

The first section of the line, Stage 3, a 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) five-station segment stretching from Bartley to Marymount, opened on 28 May 2009.[23][24] Initial ridership on this section was lower than estimated, at 32,000 passengers per day (ppd) instead of the estimated 55,000 ppd.[25] Tunneling works for the entire line were completed on 17 August 2009.[26] Stages 1 and 2 started operations on 17 April 2010,[27][28] followed by Stages 4 and 5 (from the Marymount to HarbourFront stations) on 8 October 2011.[29][30][31][32] A two-station extension to Marina Bay opened on 14 January 2012.[33][34][35][36]

Circle Line stage 6 edit

On 17 January 2013, then-Minister for Transport Lui Tuck Yew announced 'Circle Line stage 6' which will 'close the circle', set to be completed by 2025.[37] The 4 km extension will run between Marina Bay and HarbourFront.[38][39] The extension will connect commuters between the HarbourFront to Marina Bay stations and expand the rail network to the southern edge of the Central Business District. On 29 October 2015, LTA announced the station locations for Stage 6, with the working names of the stations being Keppel, Cantonment and Prince Edward. Tenders were called for construction between 2016 and 2017.[40][41][42]

On 15 May 2017, the LTA invited the public to send in suggestions for names of the three MRT stations or propose to keep their current names.[43][44] The Keppel and Cantonment stations kept their names, while Prince Edward station has been changed to 'Prince Edward Road' station.[45]

Construction of Stage 6 commenced in late 2017. A joint venture – by China State Construction Engineering (The Singapore branch) and Nishimatsu Construction – won the contract to build the new Keppel MRT station and its associated tunnels.[46][47]

Stage 6 of the line is now expected to be completed by 2026 instead due to delays caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.[48] Tunnelling works for the CCL6 were completed on 12 January 2022, with a final tunnel breakthrough from Prince Edward Road station into Cantonment station.[49] The tunnels between Cantonment station and the adjacent Prince Edward Road station were constructed only 6.7 metres (22 ft) below the former Tanjong Pagar Railway Station. Prior to the tunnelling works, an extensive survey was conducted to ensure that the tunnels do not cross through the building's foundations. Structures were erected to protect the railway station's facade and interior, and monitoring instruments were installed to watch out for any building settlement.[50] To construct the tunnels to Keppel station, the Keppel viaduct had to be closely monitored while underpinning the viaduct with new micro piles. Three bored piles were removed for the tunnelling works.[51]

Incidents edit

Nicoll Highway collapse edit

On 20 April 2004, a section of the tunnel being built for the Circle Line collapsed, when a retaining wall used in the tunnel's construction gave way. This incident occurred near the proposed site of the Nicoll Highway station, not far from the Merdeka Bridge. The accident left a collapse zone that was 150 metres (490 ft) wide, 100 metres (330 ft) long, and 30 metres (98 ft) deep. Four workers were killed, and three were injured.[52]

A criminal inquiry found the main contractor Nishimatsu Construction Company and joint venture partner firm Lum Chang Construction Company and their officers, as well as key Land Transport Authority officers responsible for the collapse. Several other officers and subcontractors were reprimanded and issued warnings in connection with the accident.[52]

As a result of this accident, the first phase of the Circle Line, previously scheduled to open in 2008, was completed in 2009 instead. The affected station has been shifted about 100 metres (330 ft) away from the accident site and is now located at Republic Avenue.

This accident also resulted in stricter safety regulations for the construction of all future MRT lines. The shifting of the Nicoll Highway station also meant it can no longer serve as a terminus for the Bukit Timah Line, partially influencing the creation of the current Downtown Line.[53]

Other incidents edit

On 16 August 2007, the Building and Construction Authority (BCA) issued a stop-work order and revoked the contractor's tunnelling permit after a 7-metre (23 ft) stretch of two lanes close to the junction of Telok Blangah Road and Alexandra Road sank about 20 centimetres (7.9 in) that evening.[54]

A section of the road above a construction site near Holland Road caved in on the morning of 24 May 2008, creating a hole. The hole, directly in front of two private houses along Cornwall Gardens, measured 8 by 7 metres and was 3 metres deep. No one was injured, but the road was temporarily closed to traffic.[55]

Line disruptions edit

On 20 September 2011, a power fault disrupted train services at all 16 stations on the Circle Line. The four-hour delay left thousands of commuters stranded during rush-hour. It was reported that leaks and a damaged electrical cable along the Circle Line were the cause of the disruption.[56] The disruption started at about 5.30 am. Train services were gradually restored from 8 am and all services were restored just before 10 am. Dakota and Mountbatten stations were the last two to resume operations.[57] Investigations were carried out, and the fault was traced back to a faulty cable beneath the platform level at Dakota station.[58] 27,000 passengers were affected by the disruption during the four hour delay, with bus bridging services plying the Circle Line route.[59]

In late August 2016, intermittent signal interference led to a five-day series of train disruptions. The issue reappeared in November.[60][61] A team of data scientists explored the data and discovered via a Marey Chart visualization that it was caused by hardware problems, sending errant signals from a "rogue" train, PV46.[62][63]

On 30 September 2023, due to the discovery of a crack on the rails near Promenade Station, delays of about 30 minutes occurred between Dhoby Ghaut, Marina Bay and Stadium stations for 14 hours.[64]

Network and operations edit

Network edit

The Circle line is the second line in Singapore to be completely automated and driverless, following the North East line and is among the world's longest driverless rapid transit lines.[2] It is also the first medium capacity line in Singapore.[citation needed]

Route edit

 
Geographically accurate map of the Circle line.[65]

The 35.5-kilometre (22.1 mi) Circle line forms an incomplete loop from Dhoby Ghaut in the Central Region of Singapore, north to Serangoon and Bishan, and south to HarbourFront, with a branch from Promenade to Marina Bay station which will be extended to HarbourFront in 2026. The fully-underground circular route also makes several links with the other MRT lines.[66] The line begins at Dhoby Ghaut station, which has an interchange with the North South and North East lines, going eastwards and paralleling Bras Basah Road and Raffles Boulevard, before joining the Circle line extension at Promenade station, which also interchanges with the Downtown line. From Promenade station, the line goes northwards and towards the east, passing beneath the Kallang Basin. Between the Stadium and Dakota stations, the line parallels Stadium Boulevard and Old Airport Road, then the line continues northwards and follows the route of Paya Lebar Road and Upper Paya Lebar Road between the Paya Lebar (which interchanges with the East West line) and Tai Seng stations.

The line curves and continues westwards between the Bartley and Marymount stations, also interchanging with the North East and North South lines at Serangoon and Bishan stations respectively, and then it continues in a general southwest direction between Caldecott and Kent Ridge, the former having an interchange with the Thomson East-Coast Line, passing through Bukit Brown Cemetery between the Caldecott and Botanic Gardens stations. The line also interchanges with the Downtown line at Botanic Gardens station and the East West line at Buona Vista station. After Kent Ridge station, the line curves eastwards, paralleling the West Coast Highway and then terminating at HarbourFront station, where it interchanges with the North East line.

From 2026, upon the completion of Stage 6, the Circle line will continue eastwards from HarbourFront, paralleling Keppel Road and Ayer Rajah Expressway, and joins the Circle line extension at Marina Bay station. The Circle line extension from Marina Bay to Promenade station generally parallels the Downtown line and Bayfront Avenue, also passing underneath Marina Bay Sands at Bayfront station, which it serves and has cross-platform interchange with the Downtown line.

Stations edit

Station codes for the line are orange, corresponding to the line's colour on the system map.[67] All stations have island platforms, with the exception of Promenade and future infill station Bukit Brown.

Circle Line stations timeline
Date Project Description
28 May 2009 Stage 3 BartleyMarymount
17 April 2010 Stage 1 & 2 BartleyDhoby Ghaut
8 October 2011 Stage 4 & 5 MarymountHarbourFront
14 January 2012 Circle Line Extension PromenadeMarina Bay
2026 Stage 6 HarbourFrontMarina Bay
Future Future stations between existing stations Bukit Brown station between Caldecott and Botanic Gardens

Legend

 
Elevated
   
Line terminus
 
Transfer outside paid area
 
Ground-level
 
Wheelchair accessible
 
Bus interchange
 
Underground
 
Civil Defence Shelter
           
Other transportation modes

List

Station code Station name Images Interchange;
Adjacent transportation
Opening Cost
 
 CC1  NS24  NE6 
   
Dhoby Ghaut      North–South Line 
   North East Line 
17 April 2010;
14 years ago
S$343.94 million
[68][69][70][note 1][note 2]
 CC2 
   
Bras Basah  
 CC3 
   
Esplanade  
 CC4  DT15 
   
Promenade      Downtown Line 

  Marina Centre
 CC5 
   
Nicoll Highway   S$573 million
[71][72][note 3][note 4]
 CC6 
   
Stadium  
 CC7 
     
Mountbatten   S$322 million
[73][74][75][76][note 5][note 6]
 CC8 
     
Dakota  
 CC9  EW8 
   
Paya Lebar      East–West Line 
 CC10  DT26 
     
MacPherson      Downtown Line  S$356.1 million
[77][78][79][note 7][note 8]
 CC11 
   
Tai Seng  
 CC12 
     
Bartley   28 May 2009;
15 years ago
S$63.5 million[80][81]
 CC13  NE12 
     
Serangoon      North East Line 

  Serangoon
S$155.95 million[82]
 CC14 
     
Lorong Chuan   S$65.0 million[83][84]
 CC15  NS17 
     
Bishan      North–South Line 

  Bishan
S$82.2 million[84][81][85]
 CC16 
   
Marymount   S$167.7 million
 CC17  TE9 
     
Caldecott      Thomson–East Coast Line  8 October 2011;
12 years ago
S$391.59 million
[86][note 9][note 10]
 CC18 
Infill station
   
Bukit Brown   TBA
 CC19  DT9 
     
Botanic Gardens      Downtown Line  8 October 2011;
12 years ago
 CC20 
   
Farrer Road  
 CC21 
   
Holland Village   S$399.91 million
[87][88][note 11][note 12]
 CC22  EW21 
     
Buona Vista      East–West Line 

  Buona Vista
  Ghim Moh
 CC23 
   
one-north  
 CC24 
   
Kent Ridge  
 CC25 
     
Haw Par Villa   S$335 million
[89][note 13][note 14]
 CC26 
   
Pasir Panjang  
 CC27 
     
Labrador Park  
 CC28 
   
Telok Blangah  
   
 CC29  NE1 
     
HarbourFront      North East Line 

  HarbourFront

  Sentosa Express VivoCity
  Singapore Cable Car Mount Faber Line
  HarbourFront Centre  
  Singapore Cruise Centre  
Stage 6 (under construction, to be ready by 2026)
 CC30 
   
Keppel   2026;
2 years' time
S$313.8 million
[90][91][92][note 15]
 CC31 
     
Cantonment   S$205 million
[93][94][95][note 16]
 CC32 
   
Prince Edward Road     Shenton Way S$310.8 million
[96][97][note 17]
Circle Line extension
 CE1  DT16 
   
Bayfront      Downtown Line  14 January 2012;
12 years ago
S$463 million
[note 18]
 
 CE2  NS27  TE20 
     
Marina Bay      North–South Line 
   Thomson–East Coast Line  
S$348.4 million
[98][99][100][note 19]

The Circle Line's numbering scheme reserves station code "CC18" for future use.

Depots edit

Number Depot name;
Lines
Location Images Line-specific
stabling capacity
Cost Opening
1
   Kim Chuan  Hougang   70 trains (until 2026)
133 trains (from 2026)
S$1.507 billion[101][102][103][90][91][b] 4 March 2009;
15 years ago

Rolling stock edit

The rolling stock for the Circle Line uses electric multiple unit (EMU) trains operating in a three-car configuration, with four doors per side on each carriage and can accommodate of up to 931 passengers in each trainsets.[104] It consists of 40 first-generation Alstom Metropolis trains were supplied under contract C830.[105][106] They are built in France by Alstom between 2006 and 2008.[104] They are stabled at Kim Chuan Depot, which was the world's largest underground depot when it opened in 2009.[107] To increase the capacity of the Circle Line, an additional 24 second-generation Alstom Metropolis trains were supplied under contract C830C, a similar in design to the first-generation trains, were delivered to Singapore from July 2014.[108][109] They are also built in Shanghai, China by Alstom between 2014 and 2016.[104] To facilitate the extension of the line with the construction of Stage 6, a tender for additional trains for the line was published on 31 March 2017.[110] To increase the capacity of the Circle Line for Circle Line Stage 6, an additional 23 third-generation Alstom Metropolis trains were supplied under contract C851E with the first train set arrived in Singapore on 11 March 2022.[111]

The automated CBTC system on board relies on "continuous two-way digital communication" between each controlled train and the control centre.

Train control edit

The Circle Line is equipped with Alstom Urbalis 300 Communications-based train control (CBTC) moving block signalling system on the MASTRIA system with Automatic train control (ATC) under Automatic train operation (ATO) GoA 4 (UTO).[112][113] The subsystems consist of Automatic train protection (ATP) to govern train speed, Iconis Automatic Train Supervision (ATS) to track and schedule trains and Smartlock Computer-based interlocking (CBI) system that prevents incorrect signal and track points to be set.

Train Data Management System (TDMS) which concentrate and dispatch the rolling stock information with fixed equipment. The IAGO Waveguide communications network has the capability to transmit video and is almost maintenance-free. Base stations are located within the signalling equipment room.

Automatic platform screen doors supplied by Westinghouse provide safety for commuters, offering protection from arriving and departing trains.[114]

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Terminus for Marina Bay shuttle during off-peak hours
  2. ^ S$297 million for original construction works, S$1.21 billion for expansion works
  1. ^ Stage 1 (CCL1)
  2. ^ Contract 825
  3. ^ Stage 1 (CCL1)
  4. ^ Contracts 824 and 828
    S$273 million in sunk costs for Contract 824 (pre-collapse)
    S$300 million for post-collapse works footed by Nishimatsu Construction Co. Ltd.
  5. ^ Stage 2 (CCL2)
  6. ^ Contract 823
  7. ^ Stage 2 (CCL2)
  8. ^ Contract 822
    S$338.6 million allocated to original contractors, S$17.5 million for completion works
  9. ^ Stage 4 (CCL4)
  10. ^ Contract 854
  11. ^ Stage 4 (CCL4)
  12. ^ Contract 855
  13. ^ Stage 5 (CCL5)
  14. ^ Contract 856
  15. ^ Contract 882
  16. ^ Contract 883
  17. ^ Contract 885
  18. ^ Contract 906; cost shared with DTL
  19. ^ Contract 901

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External links edit

  •   Media related to Mass Rapid Transit (Singapore) Circle Line at Wikimedia Commons
  • Circle line
  • LTA's commemorative book detailing the construction of the Circle Line

circle, line, other, similarly, named, rapid, transit, lines, other, countries, circle, line, disambiguation, circle, line, medium, capacity, mass, rapid, transit, line, singapore, runs, loop, from, dhoby, ghaut, station, city, centre, harbourfront, station, s. For other similarly named rapid transit lines in other countries see Circle Line disambiguation The Circle Line CCL is a medium capacity Mass Rapid Transit line in Singapore It runs in a loop from Dhoby Ghaut station in the city centre to HarbourFront station in the south via Bishan station in the centre of the country It also has a branch to Marina Bay station from Promenade station which will be extended to HarbourFront station from 2026 to form a complete loop Coloured orange on the rail map the fully underground line is approximately 35 5 kilometres 22 1 mi long with 30 stations Travelling from one end of the line to the other takes about an hour Circle LineC830 trainset at Stadium stationOverviewNative nameMalay Laluan MRT CircleChinese 地铁环线 Tamil இண ப ப எம ஆர ட வழ StatusOperationalUnder construction Stage 6 OwnerLand Transport AuthorityLocaleSingaporeTerminiDhoby GhautStadium a HarbourFrontMarina BayStations30 Operational 3 Under construction ServiceTypeRapid transitSystemMass Rapid Transit Singapore Services3Operator s SMRT Trains Ltd SMRT Corporation Depot s Kim ChuanRolling stockAlstom Metropolis C830Alstom Metropolis C830CAlstom Metropolis C851E Future Daily ridership225 561 July 2020 1 HistoryPlanned opening2026 2 years time 2026 Stage 6 Opened28 May 2009 14 years ago 2009 05 28 Stage 3 17 April 2010 14 years ago 2010 04 17 Stages 1 and 2 8 October 2011 12 years ago 2011 10 08 Stages 4 and 5 14 January 2012 12 years ago 2012 01 14 Circle Line extension TechnicalLine length35 5 km 22 1 mi Operational 4 km 2 5 mi Under construction CharacterFully undergroundTrack gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeElectrification750 V DC third railOperating speedlimit of 78 km h 48 mph Route mapLegend CC16 Marymount North South Lineto Jurong East NS17 Bishan CC15 Thomson E C Lineto Woodlands North Kallang River CC17 TE9 Caldecott Central Expressway Lorong Chuan CC14 Bukit Brown future station Serangoon CC13 Pan Island Expressway North East Lineto Punggol NE12 DT19 to Bukit Panjangto Expo Bartley CC12 CC19 Botanic Gardens Kim Chuan Depot CC20 Farrer Road Tai Seng CC11 CC21 Holland Village Kallang P L Expressway EW21 East West Lineto Tuas Link to Bukit Panjangto Expo DT26 CC22 Buona Vista MacPherson CC10 CC23 one north Pan Island Expressway Ayer Rajah Expressway East West Lineto Pasir Ris EW8 CC24 Kent Ridge Paya Lebar CC9 CC25 Haw Par Villa Geylang River CC26 Pasir Panjang Dakota CC8 CC27 Labrador Park Mountbatten CC7 CC28 Telok Blangah Stadium CC6 Kallang Basin Nicoll Highway CC5 NE1 CC29 HarbourFront NE6 Dhoby Ghaut CC1 NS24 Bras Basah CC2 CC30 Keppel Esplanade CC3 Downtown Lineto Bukit Panjang Ayer Rajah Expressway Promenade DT15 CC4 CC31 Cantonment Marina Reservoir Bayfront DT16 CE1 Downtown Lineto Expo Marina Bay NS27 CE2 CC32 Prince EdwardRoad Thomson E C Lineto Gardens by the Bay TE20 North South Lineto Marina South Pier This diagram viewtalkedit The line was the fourth MRT line to be opened on the network with the first stage From Bartley to Marymount station commenced operations on 28 May 2009 The next stage to Dhoby Ghaut was completed on 17 April 2010 and the next stage to Harbourfront opened on 8 October 2011 A two station extension to Marina Bay station was opened on 14 January 2012 The last stage of the line from Harbourfront to Marina Bay with stations at Keppel Cantonment and Prince Edward Road will be completed in 2026 completing the loop It is the second line in Singapore after the North East Line to be completely automated and driverless and is among the world s longest driverless rapid transit lines 2 It is also the first medium capacity line in Singapore with each Circle Line train the Alstom Metropolis C830 and C830C having a three car configuration Contents 1 History 1 1 Original plans 1 2 Construction of the initial stages 1 3 Circle Line stage 6 2 Incidents 2 1 Nicoll Highway collapse 2 2 Other incidents 2 3 Line disruptions 3 Network and operations 3 1 Network 3 2 Route 3 3 Stations 3 4 Depots 4 Rolling stock 5 Train control 6 Notes and references 6 1 Notes 6 2 References 7 External linksHistory editOriginal plans edit nbsp The Marina MRT line as announced in 1997 18 stations were planned for the line The Circle Line dates back to 1989 when then Minister for Communications and Information Yeo Ning Hong stated that such a system would be feasible when the population reaches four million noting the slow population growth and demand 3 Feasibility studies for the proposed line commenced on 11 October 1994 The line then named the Marina Line was first announced on 16 October 1997 The line would serve Marina Centre and the new downtown at Marina South with multiple branches to Chinatown and Dhoby Ghaut via the National Stadium to either Kallang or Paya Lebar stations The line was planned to have 18 stations with a possible extension to Tanjong Pagar station 4 Plans for the line were confirmed and approved by the government on 12 June 1998 5 However due to the high costs and lack of development in Marina South the Chinatown branch was later removed in November 1999 and the line was reduced to 6 stations from the Dhoby Ghaut to Stadium stations 6 7 8 A part of the removed leg later became part of the Downtown line 9 On the other hand a further extension towards Upper Paya Lebar was announced on 28 April 2001 10 The Marina line was eventually merged with a planned LRT line that goes from Paya Lebar to Buona Vista via Serangoon and Bishan to form Circle Line Stage 3 on 20 January 2003 11 and subsequently Circle Line Stage 4 and 5 on 12 December 2003 when Stage 4 was extended from Buona Vista to World Trade Centre to close up the link and to provide connectivity from the west to Sentosa becoming the Circle Line 12 13 On 8 August 2001 SMRT won the bid and was appointed the operator of the Circle Line 14 Names for the stations for the first three stages of the Circle line were finalised in July 2005 after the Land Transport Authority LTA conducted a public consultation exercise on the naming of stations 15 16 In November 2005 the names of the stations in Stages 4 and 5 were finalised 17 18 19 Construction of the initial stages edit nbsp The construction of Bishan station Construction started on 13 March 2002 for Stage 1 5 September 2002 for Stage 2 May 2003 for Stage 3 and January 2005 for Stages 4 and 5 Initially planned to be opened in stages from 2006 to 2010 at an estimated cost of S 6 7 billion the Nicoll Highway collapse delayed the opening of the first stage to 2009 When the line fully opened on 8 October 2011 the cost of construction had risen to nearly S 10 billion 20 21 Due to the collapse the station was relocated to a new site two thirds the size of the original 100 metres 330 ft away 22 Three stations on the Circle Line were initially designed as shell stations but the decision was made to open two of them Caldecott and Haw Par Villa previously Thomson and West Coast respectively leaving Bukit Brown as the only unopened station on the line 20 The first section of the line Stage 3 a 5 kilometres 3 1 mi five station segment stretching from Bartley to Marymount opened on 28 May 2009 23 24 Initial ridership on this section was lower than estimated at 32 000 passengers per day ppd instead of the estimated 55 000 ppd 25 Tunneling works for the entire line were completed on 17 August 2009 26 Stages 1 and 2 started operations on 17 April 2010 27 28 followed by Stages 4 and 5 from the Marymount to HarbourFront stations on 8 October 2011 29 30 31 32 A two station extension to Marina Bay opened on 14 January 2012 33 34 35 36 Circle Line stage 6 edit On 17 January 2013 then Minister for Transport Lui Tuck Yew announced Circle Line stage 6 which will close the circle set to be completed by 2025 37 The 4 km extension will run between Marina Bay and HarbourFront 38 39 The extension will connect commuters between the HarbourFront to Marina Bay stations and expand the rail network to the southern edge of the Central Business District On 29 October 2015 LTA announced the station locations for Stage 6 with the working names of the stations being Keppel Cantonment and Prince Edward Tenders were called for construction between 2016 and 2017 40 41 42 On 15 May 2017 the LTA invited the public to send in suggestions for names of the three MRT stations or propose to keep their current names 43 44 The Keppel and Cantonment stations kept their names while Prince Edward station has been changed to Prince Edward Road station 45 Construction of Stage 6 commenced in late 2017 A joint venture by China State Construction Engineering The Singapore branch and Nishimatsu Construction won the contract to build the new Keppel MRT station and its associated tunnels 46 47 Stage 6 of the line is now expected to be completed by 2026 instead due to delays caused by the COVID 19 pandemic 48 Tunnelling works for the CCL6 were completed on 12 January 2022 with a final tunnel breakthrough from Prince Edward Road station into Cantonment station 49 The tunnels between Cantonment station and the adjacent Prince Edward Road station were constructed only 6 7 metres 22 ft below the former Tanjong Pagar Railway Station Prior to the tunnelling works an extensive survey was conducted to ensure that the tunnels do not cross through the building s foundations Structures were erected to protect the railway station s facade and interior and monitoring instruments were installed to watch out for any building settlement 50 To construct the tunnels to Keppel station the Keppel viaduct had to be closely monitored while underpinning the viaduct with new micro piles Three bored piles were removed for the tunnelling works 51 Incidents editNicoll Highway collapse edit Main article Nicoll Highway collapse On 20 April 2004 a section of the tunnel being built for the Circle Line collapsed when a retaining wall used in the tunnel s construction gave way This incident occurred near the proposed site of the Nicoll Highway station not far from the Merdeka Bridge The accident left a collapse zone that was 150 metres 490 ft wide 100 metres 330 ft long and 30 metres 98 ft deep Four workers were killed and three were injured 52 A criminal inquiry found the main contractor Nishimatsu Construction Company and joint venture partner firm Lum Chang Construction Company and their officers as well as key Land Transport Authority officers responsible for the collapse Several other officers and subcontractors were reprimanded and issued warnings in connection with the accident 52 As a result of this accident the first phase of the Circle Line previously scheduled to open in 2008 was completed in 2009 instead The affected station has been shifted about 100 metres 330 ft away from the accident site and is now located at Republic Avenue This accident also resulted in stricter safety regulations for the construction of all future MRT lines The shifting of the Nicoll Highway station also meant it can no longer serve as a terminus for the Bukit Timah Line partially influencing the creation of the current Downtown Line 53 Other incidents edit On 16 August 2007 the Building and Construction Authority BCA issued a stop work order and revoked the contractor s tunnelling permit after a 7 metre 23 ft stretch of two lanes close to the junction of Telok Blangah Road and Alexandra Road sank about 20 centimetres 7 9 in that evening 54 A section of the road above a construction site near Holland Road caved in on the morning of 24 May 2008 creating a hole The hole directly in front of two private houses along Cornwall Gardens measured 8 by 7 metres and was 3 metres deep No one was injured but the road was temporarily closed to traffic 55 Line disruptions edit On 20 September 2011 a power fault disrupted train services at all 16 stations on the Circle Line The four hour delay left thousands of commuters stranded during rush hour It was reported that leaks and a damaged electrical cable along the Circle Line were the cause of the disruption 56 The disruption started at about 5 30 am Train services were gradually restored from 8 am and all services were restored just before 10 am Dakota and Mountbatten stations were the last two to resume operations 57 Investigations were carried out and the fault was traced back to a faulty cable beneath the platform level at Dakota station 58 27 000 passengers were affected by the disruption during the four hour delay with bus bridging services plying the Circle Line route 59 In late August 2016 intermittent signal interference led to a five day series of train disruptions The issue reappeared in November 60 61 A team of data scientists explored the data and discovered via a Marey Chart visualization that it was caused by hardware problems sending errant signals from a rogue train PV46 62 63 On 30 September 2023 due to the discovery of a crack on the rails near Promenade Station delays of about 30 minutes occurred between Dhoby Ghaut Marina Bay and Stadium stations for 14 hours 64 Network and operations editNetwork edit The Circle line is the second line in Singapore to be completely automated and driverless following the North East line and is among the world s longest driverless rapid transit lines 2 It is also the first medium capacity line in Singapore citation needed Route edit nbsp Geographically accurate map of the Circle line 65 The 35 5 kilometre 22 1 mi Circle line forms an incomplete loop from Dhoby Ghaut in the Central Region of Singapore north to Serangoon and Bishan and south to HarbourFront with a branch from Promenade to Marina Bay station which will be extended to HarbourFront in 2026 The fully underground circular route also makes several links with the other MRT lines 66 The line begins at Dhoby Ghaut station which has an interchange with the North South and North East lines going eastwards and paralleling Bras Basah Road and Raffles Boulevard before joining the Circle line extension at Promenade station which also interchanges with the Downtown line From Promenade station the line goes northwards and towards the east passing beneath the Kallang Basin Between the Stadium and Dakota stations the line parallels Stadium Boulevard and Old Airport Road then the line continues northwards and follows the route of Paya Lebar Road and Upper Paya Lebar Road between the Paya Lebar which interchanges with the East West line and Tai Seng stations The line curves and continues westwards between the Bartley and Marymount stations also interchanging with the North East and North South lines at Serangoon and Bishan stations respectively and then it continues in a general southwest direction between Caldecott and Kent Ridge the former having an interchange with the Thomson East Coast Line passing through Bukit Brown Cemetery between the Caldecott and Botanic Gardens stations The line also interchanges with the Downtown line at Botanic Gardens station and the East West line at Buona Vista station After Kent Ridge station the line curves eastwards paralleling the West Coast Highway and then terminating at HarbourFront station where it interchanges with the North East line From 2026 upon the completion of Stage 6 the Circle line will continue eastwards from HarbourFront paralleling Keppel Road and Ayer Rajah Expressway and joins the Circle line extension at Marina Bay station The Circle line extension from Marina Bay to Promenade station generally parallels the Downtown line and Bayfront Avenue also passing underneath Marina Bay Sands at Bayfront station which it serves and has cross platform interchange with the Downtown line Stations edit Station codes for the line are orange corresponding to the line s colour on the system map 67 All stations have island platforms with the exception of Promenade and future infill station Bukit Brown Circle Line stations timeline Date Project Description 28 May 2009 Stage 3 Bartley Marymount 17 April 2010 Stage 1 amp 2 Bartley Dhoby Ghaut 8 October 2011 Stage 4 amp 5 Marymount HarbourFront 14 January 2012 Circle Line Extension Promenade Marina Bay 2026 Stage 6 HarbourFront Marina Bay Future Future stations between existing stations Bukit Brown station between Caldecott and Botanic Gardens Legend nbsp Elevated nbsp nbsp Line terminus nbsp Transfer outside paid area nbsp Ground level nbsp Wheelchair accessible nbsp Bus interchange nbsp Underground nbsp Civil Defence Shelter nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Other transportation modes List Station code Station name Images Interchange Adjacent transportation Opening Cost nbsp CC1 NS24 NE6 nbsp nbsp Dhoby Ghaut nbsp nbsp North South Line nbsp North East Line 17 April 2010 14 years ago S 343 94 million 68 69 70 note 1 note 2 CC2 nbsp nbsp Bras Basah nbsp CC3 nbsp nbsp Esplanade nbsp CC4 DT15 nbsp nbsp Promenade nbsp nbsp Downtown Line nbsp Marina Centre CC5 nbsp nbsp Nicoll Highway nbsp S 573 million 71 72 note 3 note 4 CC6 nbsp nbsp Stadium nbsp CC7 nbsp nbsp nbsp Mountbatten nbsp S 322 million 73 74 75 76 note 5 note 6 CC8 nbsp nbsp nbsp Dakota nbsp CC9 EW8 nbsp nbsp Paya Lebar nbsp nbsp East West Line CC10 DT26 nbsp nbsp nbsp MacPherson nbsp nbsp Downtown Line S 356 1 million 77 78 79 note 7 note 8 CC11 nbsp nbsp Tai Seng nbsp CC12 nbsp nbsp nbsp Bartley nbsp 28 May 2009 15 years ago S 63 5 million 80 81 CC13 NE12 nbsp nbsp nbsp Serangoon nbsp nbsp North East Line nbsp Serangoon S 155 95 million 82 CC14 nbsp nbsp nbsp Lorong Chuan nbsp S 65 0 million 83 84 CC15 NS17 nbsp nbsp nbsp Bishan nbsp nbsp North South Line nbsp Bishan S 82 2 million 84 81 85 CC16 nbsp nbsp Marymount nbsp S 167 7 million CC17 TE9 nbsp nbsp nbsp Caldecott nbsp nbsp Thomson East Coast Line 8 October 2011 12 years ago S 391 59 million 86 note 9 note 10 CC18 Infill station nbsp nbsp Bukit Brown nbsp TBA CC19 DT9 nbsp nbsp nbsp Botanic Gardens nbsp nbsp Downtown Line 8 October 2011 12 years ago CC20 nbsp nbsp Farrer Road nbsp CC21 nbsp nbsp Holland Village nbsp S 399 91 million 87 88 note 11 note 12 CC22 EW21 nbsp nbsp nbsp Buona Vista nbsp nbsp East West Line nbsp Buona Vista nbsp Ghim Moh CC23 nbsp nbsp one north nbsp CC24 nbsp nbsp Kent Ridge nbsp CC25 nbsp nbsp nbsp Haw Par Villa nbsp S 335 million 89 note 13 note 14 CC26 nbsp nbsp Pasir Panjang nbsp CC27 nbsp nbsp nbsp Labrador Park nbsp CC28 nbsp nbsp Telok Blangah nbsp nbsp nbsp CC29 NE1 nbsp nbsp nbsp HarbourFront nbsp nbsp North East Line nbsp HarbourFront nbsp Sentosa Express VivoCity nbsp Singapore Cable Car Mount Faber Line nbsp HarbourFront Centre nbsp nbsp Singapore Cruise Centre nbsp Stage 6 under construction to be ready by 2026 CC30 nbsp nbsp Keppel nbsp 2026 2 years time S 313 8 million 90 91 92 note 15 CC31 nbsp nbsp nbsp Cantonment nbsp S 205 million 93 94 95 note 16 CC32 nbsp nbsp Prince Edward Road nbsp nbsp Shenton Way S 310 8 million 96 97 note 17 Circle Line extension CE1 DT16 nbsp nbsp Bayfront nbsp nbsp Downtown Line 14 January 2012 12 years ago S 463 million note 18 nbsp CE2 NS27 TE20 nbsp nbsp nbsp Marina Bay nbsp nbsp North South Line nbsp Thomson East Coast Line S 348 4 million 98 99 100 note 19 The Circle Line s numbering scheme reserves station code CC18 for future use Depots edit Number Depot name Lines Location Images Line specificstabling capacity Cost Opening 1 nbsp Kim Chuan Hougang nbsp 70 trains until 2026 133 trains from 2026 S 1 507 billion 101 102 103 90 91 b 4 March 2009 15 years agoRolling stock editThe rolling stock for the Circle Line uses electric multiple unit EMU trains operating in a three car configuration with four doors per side on each carriage and can accommodate of up to 931 passengers in each trainsets 104 It consists of 40 first generation Alstom Metropolis trains were supplied under contract C830 105 106 They are built in France by Alstom between 2006 and 2008 104 They are stabled at Kim Chuan Depot which was the world s largest underground depot when it opened in 2009 107 To increase the capacity of the Circle Line an additional 24 second generation Alstom Metropolis trains were supplied under contract C830C a similar in design to the first generation trains were delivered to Singapore from July 2014 108 109 They are also built in Shanghai China by Alstom between 2014 and 2016 104 To facilitate the extension of the line with the construction of Stage 6 a tender for additional trains for the line was published on 31 March 2017 110 To increase the capacity of the Circle Line for Circle Line Stage 6 an additional 23 third generation Alstom Metropolis trains were supplied under contract C851E with the first train set arrived in Singapore on 11 March 2022 111 The automated CBTC system on board relies on continuous two way digital communication between each controlled train and the control centre Train control editThe Circle Line is equipped with Alstom Urbalis 300 Communications based train control CBTC moving block signalling system on the MASTRIA system with Automatic train control ATC under Automatic train operation ATO GoA 4 UTO 112 113 The subsystems consist of Automatic train protection ATP to govern train speed Iconis Automatic Train Supervision ATS to track and schedule trains and Smartlock Computer based interlocking CBI system that prevents incorrect signal and track points to be set Train Data Management System TDMS which concentrate and dispatch the rolling stock information with fixed equipment The IAGO Waveguide communications network has the capability to transmit video and is almost maintenance free Base stations are located within the signalling equipment room Automatic platform screen doors supplied by Westinghouse provide safety for commuters offering protection from arriving and departing trains 114 Notes and references editNotes edit Terminus for Marina Bay shuttle during off peak hours S 297 million for original construction works S 1 21 billion for expansion works Stage 1 CCL1 Contract 825 Stage 1 CCL1 Contracts 824 and 828S 273 million in sunk costs for Contract 824 pre collapse S 300 million for post collapse works footed by Nishimatsu Construction Co Ltd Stage 2 CCL2 Contract 823 Stage 2 CCL2 Contract 822S 338 6 million allocated to original contractors S 17 5 million for completion works Stage 4 CCL4 Contract 854 Stage 4 CCL4 Contract 855 Stage 5 CCL5 Contract 856 Contract 882 Contract 883 Contract 885 Contract 906 cost shared with DTL Contract 901 References edit Land Transport DataMall mytransport sg Archived from the original on 21 August 2020 Retrieved 20 August 2020 a b ALSTOM chosen for the world s longest fully automated metro line in Singapore railway technology com 20 February 2002 Archived from the original on 1 October 2007 Retrieved 24 February 2008 Circle line needed with 4 million people The Straits Times retrieved from NLB 4 November 1989 Archived from the original on 6 October 2019 Retrieved 6 October 2019 Plans for new Marina train line are rolling The Business Times 16 October 1997 The proposed 12 kilometre 7 5 mi Marina line is likely to start from Kallang MRT station joining People s Park Chinatown station and there will be a branch running from Marina Centre to the Dhoby Ghaut MRT station Signing of E amp M contracts ceremony NAS 12 June 1998 Archived from the original on 20 March 2020 Retrieved 23 November 2019 6 stations The New Paper 25 November 1999 6 stations for Marina line s first phase The Straits Times 25 November 1999 p 3 Marina rail line to be scaled back The Business Times 25 November 1999 p 3 Colin Cheong 2012 The Circle Line Linking All Lines Land Transport Authority p 36 ISBN 978 981 4342 02 5 Circle Line and Kallang Paya Lebar Expressway NAS 28 April 2001 Archived from the original on 6 March 2020 Retrieved 23 November 2019 Circle Line Stage 3 www lta gov sg 20 January 2003 Archived from the original on 26 May 2003 Retrieved 15 July 2019 Completing the Circle via Holland V Today retrieved from NLB 13 December 2003 Archived from the original on 6 September 2019 Retrieved 6 September 2019 News 5 Tonight 12 December 2003 MediaCorp retrieved from NAS Archived from the original on 19 July 2019 Retrieved 19 July 2019 Appointment Of Operator For The Circle Line www lta gov sg 8 August 2001 Archived from the original on 24 December 2002 Retrieved 19 July 2019 Annex A Finalised Names For Circle Line CCL Stages 1 3 Stations www lta gov sg Archived from the original on 18 December 2006 Circle Line Station Names LTA Announces Finalised Names For Circle Line Stages 1 3 Stations And Seeks Views On Names For Circle Line Stages 4 And 5 Stations www mot gov sg Archived from the original on 29 January 2019 Retrieved 28 April 2020 Finalised Names For Circle Line CCL Stages 4 amp 5 Stations www lta gov sg Archived from the original on 18 December 2006 Station Names For Circle Line Stages 4 And 5 www lta gov sg 7 November 2005 Archived from the original on 23 April 2010 MOT Singapore Gain new perspectives on land sea amp air transport www mot gov sg Archived from the original on 25 July 2020 Retrieved 28 April 2020 a b Colin Cheong 2012 The Circle Line Linking All Lines Land Transport Authority p 46 ISBN 978 981 4342 02 5 Circle Line could cost taxpayers 10 billion AsiaOne Motoring Archived from the original on 8 October 2011 Retrieved 21 August 2016 Circle line will exceed 6 7b budget Archived 13 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine Christopher Tan The Straits Times 15 September 2007 Part of Circle Line opens today ChannelNewsAsia 28 May 2009 Archived from the original on 28 May 2009 Retrieved 28 May 2009 Early Opening for Circle Line from Bartley to Marymount PDF www lta gov sg Archived from the original PDF on 21 February 2013 Retrieved 16 April 2009 LTA completes final tunnelling work on Circle Line Channel News Asia 17 August 2009 Archived from the original on 19 October 2012 Circle Line The longest dig The Straits Times 17 August 2009 Archived from the original on 21 August 2009 Welcome Remarks By Mr Raymond Lim At The Opening Of The Circle Line From Dhoby Ghaut To Bartley on 16 April 2010 www mot gov sg Archived from the original on 1 May 2020 Retrieved 1 May 2020 Circle Line from Bartley to Dhoby Ghaut to Open 17 April www lta gov sg Archived from the original on 21 June 2011 Retrieved 26 January 2010 Connect October 2011 PDF www lta gov sg Archived from the original PDF on 5 February 2018 Speech by Mr Tharman Shanmugaratnam at the Circle Line Opening Ceremony on 7 Oct 2011 www mot gov sg Archived from the original on 1 May 2020 Retrieved 1 May 2020 Circle Line from Marymount to HarbourFront to open www mot gov sg Archived from the original on 19 November 2020 Retrieved 28 April 2020 Train crowding to ease with launch of full Circle line Minister Lui 2 August 2011 Archived from the original on 13 April 2016 Retrieved 21 August 2016 The extension on Circle Line opens with two events held concurrently at Bayfront Station and Esplanade Xchange www smrt com sg Archived from the original on 22 April 2020 Retrieved 22 April 2020 Speech by Mr Lui Tuck Yew at the Opening Ceremony of the Circle Line Extension on 13 January 2012 www mot gov sg Archived from the original on 4 September 2020 Retrieved 21 April 2020 Circle Line and Tuas West Extension updates www mot gov sg Archived from the original on 3 September 2020 Retrieved 21 April 2020 Speech by Mr Lui Tuck Yew at the Downtown Line 3 Groundbreaking Ceremony www mot gov sg Retrieved 28 April 2020 permanent dead link Factsheet Completion of Circle Line 6 Tunnelling Works Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Speech by Mr Lui Tuck Yew at visit to DTL1 Chinatown Station on 17 January 2013 MOT 17 January 2013 Archived from the original on 26 February 2020 Retrieved 19 September 2019 Circle line 6 Projects Public Transport Land Transport Authority Archived from the original on 5 January 2016 Retrieved 21 August 2016 Tender information Land Transport Authority www lta gov sg Archived from the original on 24 April 2017 Retrieved 23 April 2017 Tender information Land Transport Authority www lta gov sg Archived from the original on 24 April 2017 Retrieved 23 April 2017 Tender information Land Transport Authority www lta gov sg Archived from the original on 24 April 2017 Retrieved 23 April 2017 LTA Invites Public to Suggest MRT station Names for Circle line 6 stations Press Room Land Transport Authority www lta gov sg Archived from the original on 18 September 2017 Retrieved 18 September 2017 Wanted Names for 3 new Circle line stations Channel NewsAsia 15 May 2017 Archived from the original on 16 May 2017 Retrieved 15 May 2017 Excavation for Circle Line 6 to start in middle of next year The Straits Times 28 September 2018 Archived from the original on 13 October 2018 Retrieved 13 October 2018 First CCL6 contracts awarded by LTA ChannelNewsAsia Archived from the original on 12 October 2017 Retrieved 12 October 2017 Construction of Circle line 6 to start by end of 2017 first three civil contracts awarded The Straits Times 8 September 2017 Archived from the original on 12 October 2017 Retrieved 12 October 2017 Speech by Minister For Transport Mr Ong Ye Kung at MOT Committee of Supply Debate 2021 on A Tale of Three Connections www mot gov sg Archived from the original on 14 April 2021 Retrieved 8 March 2021 Tan Christopher 12 January 2022 Tunnelling works for Circle Line MRT extension completed The Straits Times Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 12 January 2022 Circle Line 6 tunnelling works complete 3 new stations set to open in 2026 CNA 12 January 2022 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 12 January 2022 Factsheet Completion of Circle Line 6 Tunnelling Works LTA 12 January 2022 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 12 January 2022 a b COMMITTEE OF INQUIRY CONCLUDES STRING OF CRITICAL DESIGN ERRORS CAUSED COLLAPSE AT NICOLL HIGHWAY PDF 13 May 2005 Archived PDF from the original on 9 May 2016 Retrieved 18 September 2017 Colin Cheong 2012 The Circle Line Linking All Lines Land Transport Authority p 42 ISBN 978 981 4342 02 5 Stop work order at Telok Blangah site is fourth this year on 6 7b MRT project Archived 9 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine T Rajan The Straits Times 22 August 2007 Road above Circle line construction site caves in Archived 26 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine CNA Live Channel NewsAsia 24 May 2008 Leaks damaged cable cause of 4 hour delay on Circle line The Straits Times 29 September 2011 Archived from the original on 17 October 2011 Retrieved 19 October 2011 Thousands affected by Circle line disruption Channel News Asia 20 September 2011 Archived from the original on 24 October 2011 Retrieved 19 October 2011 Faulty cable led to Circle line disruption Channel News Asia 20 September 2011 Archived from the original on 26 October 2011 Retrieved 19 October 2011 Call for thorough probe on Circle line disruption Channel News Asia 22 September 2011 Archived from the original on 25 October 2011 Retrieved 19 October 2011 Signal interference issue plagues Circle line again TODAYonline Archived from the original on 20 December 2016 Retrieved 3 December 2016 Circle line signal fault that caused train disruptions on Wednesday similar to problem in September LTA SMRT The Straits Times 2 November 2016 Archived from the original on 30 November 2016 Retrieved 3 December 2016 Tegos Michael Data scientists caught Singapore s rogue train Here s what else they can do www techinasia com Archived from the original on 20 December 2016 Retrieved 3 December 2016 datagovsg 1 December 2016 How the Circle line rogue train was caught with data Data gov sg Blog Archived from the original on 15 March 2023 Retrieved 3 December 2016 Circle Line train services resume after 14 hour disruption CNA Archived from the original on 30 September 2023 Circle Line 6 tunnelling works complete 3 new stations set to open in 2026 CNA Retrieved 29 August 2023 LTA Getting Around Public Transport Rail Network Circle Line www lta gov sg Archived from the original on 1 November 2019 Retrieved 29 April 2020 Is the Circle Line yellow or orange LTA amp SMRT have an answer mothership sg Archived from the original on 24 December 2020 Retrieved 28 December 2020 Project LTA C825 STECS stecs2 Archived from the original on 3 September 2020 Retrieved 27 April 2020 LTA Annual Safety Award Convention 2005 lta gov sg Archived from the original on 30 November 2009 Award Of Second Civil Works Contract For The Marina Line lta gov sg 7 August 2001 Archived from the original on 1 May 2009 Retrieved 2 May 2009 Civil Works Contract Awarded For The Marina Line www lta gov sg Archived from the original on 1 May 2009 Retrieved 23 April 2010 Marina Mass Rapid Transit MRT Line C824 Design and Build Tender CPG Consultants Archived from the original on 9 October 2020 Retrieved 10 October 2020 Lum Chang Civil amp Infrastructure www lumchang com sg Archived from the original on 12 October 2020 Retrieved 17 August 2020 CPG Consultants Circle Line Stage 2 Geotechnical and Structural Engineering Consultancy Services Contract 823 www cpgcorp com sg Archived from the original on 10 July 2021 Retrieved 17 August 2020 Projects Rail www lta gov sg 4 February 2009 Archived from the original on 19 September 2009 Lum Chang Technical Brochure PDF www lumchang com sg Archived PDF from the original on 10 July 2021 Retrieved 10 July 2021 Projects Rail www lta gov sg 4 February 2009 Archived from the original on 19 September 2009 LTA may replace Circle Line contractor www asiaone com Archived from the original on 18 July 2020 Retrieved 18 July 2020 Yeo Richard 19 September 2007 Property Highlights of Singapore Local Firm To Finish 2 Circle Line Stations Property Highlights of Singapore Archived from the original on 11 July 2021 Retrieved 18 July 2020 Projects Rail www lta gov sg 5 August 2008 Archived from the original on 6 August 2009 Retrieved 19 June 2020 a b Award Of Contracts For Stage 3 Of Circle Line www lta gov sg 31 July 2003 Archived from the original on 6 August 2008 Retrieved 19 June 2020 Project LTA C852 STECS Archived from the original on 4 December 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2021 Award Of Contracts For Stage 3 Of Circle Line www lta gov sg 27 June 2003 Archived from the original on 6 October 2008 Retrieved 19 June 2020 a b Projects Rail www lta gov sg 5 August 2008 Archived from the original on 6 August 2009 Retrieved 19 June 2020 313m Circle Line contracts awarded The Straits Times 1 August 2003 p 10 Award Of Contract For Construction And Completion Of Adam And Farrer Stations www lta gov sg Archived from the original on 6 September 2012 Retrieved 19 November 2020 Singapore LTA CCL4 C855 www stecs com Archived from the original on 26 November 2020 Retrieved 26 November 2020 Award of Contract for Construction And Completion of Holland Buona Vista And NUH Stations www lta gov sg Archived from the original on 14 January 2012 Retrieved 26 November 2020 Senior Planning Engineer Shimizu Taisei SK E amp C Mass Rapit Transit Project Construction of Station and Tunnel dedicated to Project Controls Archived from the original on 30 January 2022 Retrieved 11 July 2021 a b LTA News Room News Releases LTA Awards First Three Civil Contracts for Circle Line 6 5 March 2020 Archived from the original on 5 March 2020 Retrieved 5 March 2020 a b First Circle Line 6 contracts worth S 1 75b awarded by LTA CNA 5 March 2020 Archived from the original on 5 March 2020 Retrieved 5 March 2020 Circle Line 6 Archived from the original on 20 September 2019 Retrieved 20 September 2019 Circle Line s Cantonment MRT station contract goes to China State Construction for 205m Transport News amp Top Stories The Straits Times 20 September 2019 Archived from the original on 20 September 2019 Retrieved 20 September 2019 News Room News Releases LTA Awards Final Construction Contract for Circle Line 6 LTA 10 November 2017 Archived from the original on 30 October 2020 Retrieved 30 October 2020 Upcoming Projects Rail Expansion Circle Line 6 LTA 12 June 2020 Archived from the original on 20 September 2019 Retrieved 30 October 2020 LTA News Room News Releases LTA Awards Construction Contract for Circle Line 6 Prince Edward Station and Tunnels 5 March 2020 Archived from the original on 5 March 2020 Retrieved 5 March 2020 Prince Edward MRT station contract awarded to China Railway Tunnel Group Transport News amp Top Stories The Straits Times 5 March 2020 Archived from the original on 5 March 2020 Retrieved 5 March 2020 Award Of Contract For CCL Marina Bay Station Land Transport Authority Archived from the original on 31 December 2013 Projects Home Archived from the original on 27 January 2021 Retrieved 21 April 2020 List of contracts awarded for Downtown Line 1 PDF Land Transport Authority Archived from the original PDF on 1 November 2015 Shereena Sajeed 4 March 2009 World s largest underground depot opens in Singapore Channel News Asia Archived from the original on 19 October 2012 Retrieved 17 June 2022 LTA News Room News Releases Joint Release by the Land Transport Authority LTA amp SLA Circle Line 6 Becoming A Full Circle 5 March 2020 Archived from the original on 5 March 2020 Retrieved 5 March 2020 Biggest underground train depot set to become even bigger Transport News amp Top Stories The Straits Times 5 March 2020 Archived from the original on 5 March 2020 Retrieved 5 March 2020 a b c Alstom in Singapore PDF Alstom 8 December 2019 Archived from the original PDF on 8 December 2019 Retrieved 8 December 2019 Tuas West Extension Groundbreaking Ceremony Speech PDF Speech Land Transport Authority 4 May 2012 Archived from the original PDF on 29 September 2013 AWARD OF ELECTRICAL amp MECHANICAL SYSTEMS CONTRACT 830 FOR THE MARINA line Archived 27 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Biggest underground train depot set to become even bigger The Straits Times 30 October 2015 Archived from the original on 10 March 2016 Retrieved 4 March 2016 LTA and SMRT Award Contracts for New Trains and Re Signalling Project Land Transport Authority 1 February 2012 Archived from the original on 29 September 2013 Retrieved 16 November 2013 Alstom to supply 34 Metropolis trains and upgrade signaling on the system 3 February 2012 Archived from the original on 31 December 2013 Retrieved 16 November 2013 Tender information Land Transport Authority www lta gov sg Archived from the original on 15 July 2019 Retrieved 23 April 2017 Kok Yufeng 11 March 2022 New train for Circle Line MRT arrives in Singapore first of 23 to be shipped here The Straits Times The Straits Times Archived from the original on 14 March 2022 Retrieved 11 March 2022 Singapore Northeast Line will soon be the largest fully automatic metro system in the world PDF pp 4 to 8 Archived PDF from the original on 15 June 2020 Retrieved 16 June 2020 URBALIS Evolution Controlling the Performance PDF p 4 Archived PDF from the original on 15 June 2020 Retrieved 16 June 2020 Global Project Portfolio westinghouse brakes com Archived from the original on 27 August 2016 External links edit nbsp Media related to Mass Rapid Transit Singapore Circle Line at Wikimedia Commons Circle line LTA s commemorative book detailing the construction of the Circle Line Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Circle MRT line amp oldid 1223493843, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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