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Singapore’s new Jewel Changi Airport isn’t just about planes. It has a 40m waterfall inside it

  • The gleaming, dome-shaped glass structure was designed by Israeli-Canadian architect Moshe Safdie, whose past works include Singapore’s famed Marina Bay Sands

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Jewel Changi Airport. Photo: Dewey Sim

Thousands of Singaporeans are flocking to the city’s newest major attraction, ahead of the new S$1.7 billion (US$1.3 billion) Jewel Changi Airport’s opening on Wednesday.

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It’s not a theme park or priceless piece of art, but it might as well be.

Over four years, Changi Airport Group and real estate giant CapitaLand transformed what was previously the open-air car park of its Terminal 1 into an epic, multifaceted, 10-storey complex.

The gleaming, dome-shaped glass structure was designed by Israeli-Canadian architect Moshe Safdie, whose past works include Singapore’s famed Marina Bay Sands.

Inside stands the world’s tallest indoor waterfall – at 40 metres high. There’s about 300 more shops, food and drink outlets, and nature areas populated with 2,500 trees and 100,000 shrubs hand-picked and flown in from countries including Spain, China and Thailand.

But before Jewel opens to the world, hundreds of thousands of eager locals are expected to get a sneak peak inside.

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SINGAPOREANS LOVE THEIR AIRPORTS

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