Please note that this is an overdue event

Everything You Know Goes Away: An indoor interactive playground



Travel back in time to the good ol’ days—of poor sanitation and no recycling, of hunting exotic, wild animals, of terrifically fun and deadly amusement parks

 

A blast to the past and a peephole into the future, Everything You Know Goes Away is a nostalgic playground with a twist. Designed by Joshua Comaroff & Lekker Architects, with collaborator Leow Si Min.

Drop by Everything you know goes away on the school holiday weekends (16, 17, 23 and 24 March) at 2pm and 3pm for the wondrous tales of Bedah’s Fantastical Travel’s with Epok-Epok!, a special storytelling commission by Suhaili Safari.

Or mix creativity and play this March Holiday with an assortment of delectable school holiday offerings in the form of workshops by Mrydette and Darel, and performances by Tiny Feat, suitable for children aged 2 to 12.

For more information, or to sign up for the workshops and performances, visit tinyurl.com/thevanishingsubstation.Everything You Know Goes Away is part of The Vanishing, Or Time Goes Away, the final chapter of The Substation’s 2018/19 programme Cities change. People die. Everything you know goes away.

For more information on the programme, visit citieschange.sg/The-Vanishing.

Free Admission with Ticketed Events

 

Image Credit: The Substation


Age

2–12


Price

Price: Free (Free Admission with Ticketed Events)


Telephone number

+65 6337 7535


Links


Address

Singapore
45 Armenian Street, Singapore 179936

How to get there?

Train: 10 minute walk from City Hall, Bras Basah and Bencoolen MRTs

 

Bus: 

Stamford Court: 124, 147, 166, 174, 174e, 190

Capitol Building: 7, 14, 14e, 16, 36, 77, 106, 111, 128, 131, 162, 162M, 167, 167e, 171, 175, 700, 700a, 850e, 857, 951E, 971E

SMU: 7, 14, 14e, 16, 36, 77, 106, 111, 124, 128, 131, 147, 162, 162M, 166, 167, 167e, 171, 174, 174e, 175, 700, 700a, 850e, 857, 951E, 971E

 

Taxi: Pick-up and drop-off on Loke Yew Street and walk one minute to The Substation

 

For drivers: Armenian Street is currently undergoing a major construction project. Public parking is still available in two nearby spots — the open carpark next to the Peranakan Museum, enter via Loke Yew Street, and the SMU Law School carpark, accessible from Coleman Street/Canning Rise.