thumb|The [[Singapore Conference Hall, a national monument of Singapore]]
The National Monuments of Singapore are sites, buildings and structures in Singapore that have been designated by the National Heritage Board (NHB) as possessing exceptional historic, traditional, archaeological, architectural or artistic merit to the country. These monuments are legally protected from demolition due to their cultural and historical significance, including associations with pivotal events such as the founding of modern Singapore, the Second World War, the independence of Singapore, and the nation's early development. The Preservation of Monuments Act empowers the NHB to oversee the preservation of these landmarks and encourages research as well as public engagement with Singapore's architectural heritage.
The framework for designating national monuments was established under the Preservation of Monuments Act, enacted in December 1970. The act provided for the identification and legal protection of culturally significant sites, leading to the formation of the Preservation of Monuments Board (PMB) in April 1972. This body was tasked with enforcing the act amidst growing concern over the loss of heritage buildings due to rapid urban redevelopment. By mid-1973, forty sites were shortlisted for preservation and public suggestions were invited to expand the list. The initial batch of eight designated landmarks included the Thong Chai Medical Institution, Armenian Church, St Andrew's Cathedral, Telok Ayer Market, Thian Hock Keng Temple, Sri Mariamman Temple, Fatimah Mosque and the Cathedral of the Good Shepherd. In 2021, amendments were proposed to expand the act's definition to include open spaces, inland waters and any land area associated with human activity, both past and present.
The NHB, a statutory board under the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth within the Government of Singapore, is responsible for gazetting and maintaining national monuments. As of date, 83 structures have been gazetted of which 77 are formally recognised as national monuments. These include religious sites, civic buildings, marketplaces and other culturally significant landmarks across the island. The most recent addition to the list is 38 Oxley Road, which was officially gazetted on 12 December 2025. A comprehensive and regularly updated list of these monuments is accessible via the NHB's heritage portal.
List of national monuments
{| class="wikitable sortable static-row-numbers sticky-header col1left"
|-
! Building name|| Usage as of 2025
!Details|| class="unsortable" |Location
! style="max-width:3em" |Date completed
! style="width:2em" | Date gazetted
|-
|38 Oxley Road<br>150px
|House
|An eight bedroom two storey bungalow near Orchard Road. Lee Kuan Yew and his family moved into the residence after World War II, with his wife Kwa Geok Choo taking up residence there in 1950. Meetings of the People's Action Party (PAP) were regularly held in the basement in 1954. The building continued to serve as Lee's home throughout his tenure as prime minister, and his first born son, the third prime minister of Singapore Lee Hsien Loong, was raised there. Following Singapore's separation from Malaysia in 1965, fortifications and a guardhouse were added. Prior to Lee Kuan Yew's death in 2015, he expressed his intention for the house to be demolished, a position later shared by his daughter, Lee Wei Ling, who died in 2024, as well as his other son, Lee Hsien Yang. However, the government opposed the plan and subsequently gazetted it as a national monument in 2025. It remains undetermined as to which parts of the house would be demolished or retained since its elevation into a national monument. Any sort of demolition will make it the second after the Cathay Building to have parts of its structure demolished.
|Orchard
|1898
|12 December 2025
|- al
| Anderson Bridge150px
| Bridge
|Opened in 1910, the steel truss girder bridge spans and was constructed to ease traffic on the Cavenagh Bridge. It is named after Sir John Anderson, the Governor of the Straits Settlement from 1904 to 1911.
| <span style="display:none"></span>Singapore River
|
|
|-
| Armenian Church<br>150px
| Church
| The Armenian Church was opened in 1836 to serve the Armenian community during colonial Singapore. Designed by George D. Coleman, it resembles the Mother Church of the Armenian Apostolic Church in Etchmiadzin, Armenia. It is Singapore's oldest church.
| <span style="display:none">Hill Street 0060</span>60 Hill Street
| 1836
|
|-
| Bowyer Block, Singapore General Hospital<br/>150px
|Singapore General Hospital Museum
|Opened in 1926 as the Upper Block, it was built as part of the new Singapore General Hospital (SGH). It was renamed to the Bowyer Block in post-World War II (WWII) in memory of Dr John H. Bowyer. The neoclassical building currently houses the Singapore General Hospital Museum and is the only remaining part of the original SGH.
| <span style="display:none">Third Hospital Avenue 0011 </span>11 Third Hospital Avenue
|
|
|-
| Caldwell House<br>150px
| Part of the CHIJMES complex
|The Caldwell House was a bungalow for the French sisters of Convent of the Holy Infant Jesus Chapel. Currently, the neoclassical building is part of CHIJMES, a shopping centre. It is the oldest building in the CHIJMES compound.
| <span style="display:none">Victoria Street 0030</span>30 Victoria Street
| –
|
|-
| Cathay Building<br>150px
| Commercial
|Opened in 1939, the Art Deco cinema was Singapore's first skyscraper and air-conditioned cinema. During the Japanese occupation of Singapore, it became an office for the Japanese Military Propaganda Department. As of 2025, it is the only national monument to have the building/structure demolished, but save for the façade of the original building remaining.
| <span style="display:none">Handy Road 0002</span>2 Handy Road
|
|
|-
| Cathedral of the Good Shepherd<br>150px
| Church
|One of Singapore's oldest cathedrals and the cathedral church for the Archbishop of Singapore.
| 4 Queen Street
| –
|
|-
| Cavenagh Bridge<br>150px
| War memorial
|A war memorial dedicated to those who died in World War I (WWI) and WWII. Initially opened in 1922 to honour those from the Colony of Singapore who came to fight in Europe during WWI, the reverse side of the monument was dedicated to those who died defending Singapore and in WW2. It is based on The Cenotaph in Whitehall, London.
| Connaught Drive
|
|
|-
| Central Fire Station<br>150px
| Fire station
|Completed in 1909, it is Singapore's oldest surviving fire station. It was built under the recommendation of the then-Superintendent of the Singapore Fire Brigade. Firefighters from the fire station responded to various post-WWII and post-independence emergencies such as the Bukit Ho Swee fire and Collapse of Hotel New World. The 'blood-and-bandage' building is still operational.
| <span style="display:none">Hill Street 0062</span>62 Hill Street
|
|
|-
| Changi Prison, Old Entrance Gate, Turret and Wall<br>150px
| Prison
|Changi Prison started operations in 1937 as a maximum security prison in response to the then-ongoing prison overcrowding problem. During the Japanese Occupation of Singapore, it was used as a prisoner-of-war camp where the Double Tenth incident took place. Much of the original building was replaced by a new building except for the entrance gate, two corner turrets, and a long wall.
| <span style="display:none">Upper Changi Road North</span> Upper Changi Road North
|
|
|-
| Chesed-El Synagogue<br>150px
| Synagogue
|The synagogue was built by Sir Manasseh Meyer in 1905 as the Maghain Aboth Synagogue was insufficient for the expanding Jewish population. It is currently one of two synagogues in Singapore, the other being the Maghain Aboth Synagogue.
| <span style="display:none">Oxley Road 0002</span>2 Oxley Rise
|
|
|-
| Chinese High School Clock Tower Building<br>150px
| Part of Hwa Chong Institution
|Built between 1923 and 1925, the neoclassical clock tower was opened as part of The Chinese High School's (present day Hwa Chong Institution) Bukit Timah campus, the first secondary and high school specifically for the Chinese community in Singapore.
| <span style="display:none">Bukit Timah Road 0673</span>673 Bukit Timah Road
|
|
|-
| Chung Cheng High School (Main) Administration Building and Entrance Arch<br>150px
| School
|Completed in 1968, the Administration Building of the Chung Cheng High School's Goodman Road Campus was constructed to provide modern educational facilities for students. Chung Cheng High School was one of the first schools accessible to Chinese youths. The building combines both traditional Chinese and modern architectural elements such as its double-tier Chinese roof.
| <span style="display:none">Goodman Road 0030</span>50 Goodman Road
|
|
|-
| Church of Our Lady of Lourdes<br>150px
| Church
|Opened in 1888, the neo-gothic church was constructed to cater to the then-expanding Tamil Catholic community. It is one of Singapore's oldest churches and still used to this day by different ethnicities.
| <span style="display:none">Ophir Road 0050</span>50 Ophir Road
| 1888
|
|-
| Church of Saints Peter and Paul<br>150px
| Church
|Initially constructed to serve the growing Chinese and Tamil Catholic communities, it was designated as a church exclusively for the Chinese due to Church of Our Lady of Lourdes's nickname as "The Tamil Church". It is one of the oldest Catholic churches in Singapore.
| <span style="display:none">Queen Street 0225A</span>225A Queen Street
| 1869–1870
|
|-
| Church of St Teresa<br>150px
| Church
|Opened in 1929 to cater to Hokkien Catholics, it is the only Catholic building to be built have Romano-Byzantine architecture. The Church continues to be used by different ethnicities and houses the Singapore branch of the Apostle of the Sea, an international Catholic group for seafarers.
| <span style="display:none">Bukit Purmei 0002</span>2 Bukit Purmei
|
|
|-
| Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary<br>150px
| Church
|Built between 1898 and 1901, it was constructed to replace the Church of Saint Mary as the Teochew Catholic community in Hougang was expanding then. The Neo-Gothic church is one of the oldest churches in the suburbs of Singapore.
| <span style="display:none">Upper Serangoon Road 1259</span>1259 Upper Serangoon Road
| 1901
|
|-
| Civilian War Memorial<br>150px
| War memorial
|Opened in 1967 by Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew, the Civilian War Memorial is dedicated to those who died during the Japanese occupation of Singapore in WWII. It is known as the "Four Chopsticks" by locals due to its four columns which represent the four main ethnic groups of Singapore who died under Japanese occupation, being Chinese, Malays, Indians, and Eurasians.
| War Memorial Park
| 15 February 1967
|
|-
| Former City Hall<br>150px
| Part of the National Gallery Singapore
|Completed in 1929, it hosted Municipal Council. It was where Supreme Commander of the South East Asia Command Louis Mountbatten accepted the surrender of General Seishiro Itagaki in 1945. In 1959, it hosted Lee Kuan Yew's swearing as Singapore's first Prime Minister and the introductions of Singapore's national anthem "Majulah Singapura", state crest, and state flag. In 2015, the neoclassical-modernist building became part of the National Gallery Singapore along with the Former Supreme Court.
| <span style="display:none">Saint Andrew's Road 0003</span>3 Saint Andrew's Road
| 1926–1929
|
|-
| College of Medicine Building<br>150px
| Occupied by the Ministry of Health (MOH), Singapore Medical Council, and College of Family Physicians
|The College of Medicine Building opened as The Straits and Federated Malay States Government Medical School in 1905. In 1913 it was renamed to King Edward VII Medical School after receiving a donation from the King Edward VII Memorial Fund the year prior, then subsequently renaming itself to be King Edward VII College of Medicine in 1921. The school was merged with Raffles College to create the University of Malaya and subsequently became the Faculty of Medicine. Currently, the Ministry of Health (MOH) Singapore Medical Council, and College of Family Physicians occupy the neoclassical building.
| <span style="display:none">College Road 0016</span>16 College Road
| 1926
|
|-
| Convent of the Holy Infant Jesus Chapel<br>150px
| Asian Civilisations Museum
|Completed in 1867, various government departments moved from Maxwell's House to the building, where it came to be known as the "Government Offices". It would later come to be known as the "Empress Place Building", which came from the nearby pedestrian space Empress Place and in turned was named after Queen Victoria. It was turned into a history and culture museum in the 1980s. Since 2003, it has been used for the Asian Civilisations Museum. The building features neoclassical details such as rusticated floors, arcaded verandahs, and Roman Doric façades and columns.
| <span style="display:none">Empress Place 0001</span>1 Empress Place
| 1864–1920
|
|-
| Former Admiralty House<br>frameless|150x150px
| School
|Completed in 1940 by His Majesty Navy Works Department, it used to house the Commodore Superintendent of Sembawang Naval Base. After several renamings over the years, it was finally renamed to the Former Admiralty House when it became a National Monument in 2002. The design of the house, often attributed to Sir Edwin L. Lutyens, has elements of the Arts and Crafts movement. It is planned to be used for the Canberra Library as part of the Bukit Canberra integrated development.
| <span style="display:none">Old Nelson Road 0345</span>345 Old Nelson Road
| 1940
|
|-
| Former Attorney-General's Chambers (now Parliament House Block C)<br>150px
| Parliament House Block C
|The first structure recorded on this national monument's site was an annexe of Maxwell's House, which opened in 1839. A second building emerged in the 1880s, either from the annexe demolished or incorporated into a two-storey structure. In 1976, the building was renovated house the chambers of the Attorney-Generals. The building was restored in 1991 where it became part of the Parliament House complex. In order to match the architecture of the neoclassical-styled building with surrounding buildings, a rusticated base was added.
| 1 Parliament Place
|
|
|-
| Former Command House<br/><br>frameless|150x150px
| UBS University
|Built to 1938 as the official residence of the General Officer Commanding (GOC) of Malaya, it was originally known as the Flagstaff House. In the 1970s, the British transferred ownership of the house to the Singapore Government after its military withdrew from Singapore. It later became known as the Command House, possibly a reference to being the former residence of the GOC. It is not known who designed the Arts and Crafts movement-inspired building, with some speculating Frank W. Brewer<nowiki/> to be the architect. It is currently houses the UBS University.
| <span style="display:none">Kheam Hock Road 0017</span>17 Kheam Hock Road
| 1937–1938
|
|-
| Former Ford Factory (now Memories at Old Ford Factory)<br/><br>150px
| Museum
|Starting operations in October 1941, it was built for the Ford Motor Company of Malaya, a subsidiary of Ford Motor Company of Canada. On 15 February 1942, GOC of Malaya Arthur E. Percival meet with General Yamashita at the Ford Plant to discuss the British's surrender of Singapore to the Japanese, where General Percival signed the surrender document in the plant's boardroom. It was subsequently handed back to Fort in 1947 and the manufacture of automobiles resumed until Ford moved out in 1980. Designed by Emile Brizay, it features Art Deco elements such as bevelled doorways and a flagpole rising from the building. The Former Ford Factory was one of Singapore's industrial showpiece at its completion.
| <span style="display:none">Upper Bukit Timah Road 0315</span>315 Upper Bukit Timah Road
| 1941
|
|-
| Former Fullerton Building<br>150px
| The Fullerton Hotel
|Opened in 1928 as the Fullerton Building, it was named after the former Fort Fullerton, in turn named after Governor of the Straits Settlements Sir Robert Fullerton. It hosted the various government departments, with a notable one being the General Post Office. After WWII, it continued to house various government agencies. The building underwent renovations between 1997 to 2000 to become The Fullerton Hotel, which opened in 2001. At the time of its opening it had many "modern" facilities, such as having 14 lifts and an automated mail-sorting system.
| <span style="display:none">Fullerton Square 0001</span>1 Fullerton Square
| 1928
|
|-
| Former Hill Street Police Station<br>150px
| Occupied by the Ministry of Communications and Information and Ministry of Culture, Community, and Youth
|Opened in 1934 as Hill Street Police Station and Barracks, it was built to accommodate the growth of the Singapore Police Force, which later vacated the building in December 1980. From 1983 onwards, it housed various government departments under different names. The neoclassical building was described as "the biggest and grandest of its kind in Malaya" at the time of its opening. A prominent element of this building is its windows, amounting to over 900 and are painted in bright colours.
| <span style="display:none">Hill Street 0140</span>140 Hill Street
| 1934
|
|-
|Former Kandang Kerbau Hospital<br>frameless|150x150px
|Land Transport Authority
|Dr Benjamin Sheares, who later became Singapore's second president, pioneered a surgical procedure at the hospital to create a neovagina for women born without one. NHB credited the hospital's doctors and midwives with lowering maternal and infant mortality rates and driving the post-war baby boom between 1945 and the 1960s. More than 1.2 million babies have been delivered by the time KK Hospital had relocated to the new building in 1997. The building was acquired by LTA thereafter. It housed transport exhibits such as Downtown Line, Thomson-East Coast Line and Jurong Region Line mockup train.
|1 Hampshire Road
|1933 - 1955
|
|-
| Former Raffles College (now NUS Campus at Bukit Timah)<br>150px
| National University of Singapore (NUS) Bukit Timah Campus
|Open on 22 July 1929, Raffles College was the first college for arts and sciences. In October 1946, it became part of the University of Malaya by merging with the King Edward VII College of Medicine. This increased enrolment to a point where Raffles College can no longer support the student population, resulting in the two schools to split, with the University of Singapore established in the Former Raffles College building. As of date, the Raffles College Building is used as NUS's Bukit Timah Campus. It is designed by Cyril A. Farey and Graham R. Dawbarn.
| <span style="display:none">Waterloo Street 0024</span>469E Bukit Timah Road
| c. 1920s
|
|-
| Former Tanjong Pagar railway station<br>150px
| Planned to be integrated with Cantonment MRT station
|Opened on 2 May 1932, it was built in response to the growth of passengers and goods transported by rail with the opening of the Johor–Singapore Causeway. Construction completed in 1931, where it was the southernmost terminal for the Federated Malay States Railways until 30 June 2011. Designed by Swan & Maclaren, the Art Deco building was inspired by existing rail stations in England. The train terminal combines Art Deco and local architecture elements. As of date, it is undergoing works to be integrated with Cantonment MRT station.
| <span style="display:none">Keppel Road 0030</span>30 Keppel Road
| 1932
|
|-
| Fort Siloso<br>150px
| War museum
|Built by the British in 1878, Fort Siloso along with other forts were designed to protect the New Harbour (present day Keppel Harbour). During the Battle of Singapore, it was used to fight Japanese soldiers and engaged in several battles. The fort was handed over to the Singapore Armed Forces in 1967 and continued to operate until 1974, when it was turned into a military museum. Designed by Colonial Engineer Henry McCallum, Fort Siloso has an open artillery battery design.
| Siloso Road
| 1878
|
|-
| Goodwood Park Hotel (Tower Block)<br>150px
| Part of Goodwood Park Hotel
|Opened in 1900 as the Deutsches Haus, it was commissioned by the Teutonia Club. The building was acquired by Jewish brothers Morris, Ezekiel, and Ellis Manasseh in 1918, where they eventually turned it into the Goodwood Park Hotel in 1929 and converted its Tower Wing to have guestrooms. It was planned in the 1970s to reconstruct a replica of the tower's original pinnacle, though a new pinnacle resembling the old one was constructed. The tower exhibits elements of the Queen Anne Revival style, though it has been proposed that the tower may have been inspired by castles in the Rhineland, which has tall towers.
| <span style="display:none">Scotts Road 0022</span>22 Scotts Road
| 1900
|
|-
| Hong San See<br>150px
| Temple
|Built between 1908 to 1913 by Hokkien immigrants from Nan'an, it was a replacement for a previous Hong San See. Several deities are worshipped in the Hokkien architectural-styled temple, mainly Guang Ze Zun Wang.
| <span style="display:none">Mohamed Sultan Road 0031</span>31 Mohamed Sultan Road
| 1908–1913
|
|-
| House of Tan Yeok Nee<br>150px
| Under restoration
|Constructed between 1882 to 1885 by Teochew merchant Tan Yeok Nee, it is modelled after his house in his hometown. After the Tan family moved out, it was occupied by various groups between from 1902 to 1991. As of 2022, it was sold to Indonesian businessman Bachtiar Karim. The house was constructed under feng shui principles and the Teochew architecture style, such as its almost straight roof ridges
| <span style="display:none">Clemenceau Avenue 0207</span>207 Clemenceau Avenue
| 1885
|
|-
| The Istana<br>150px
| Residence for the President of Singapore
|Initiated by Governor of the Straits Settlements Harry Ord, it was originally known as the Government House. In 1959, it was renamed to the Istana Negara Singapura when the British handed the building to Yang di-Pertuan Negara Yusof Ishak. The Istana has been the residence for the President of Singapore since 1965. The Istana Negara Singapura features European and Malay elements in its architecture. During certain holidays, the Istana Negara Singapura is open to the public.
| <span style="display:none">Orchard Road</span>Orchard Road
| 1867–1869
|
|-
| Istana Kampong Gelam<br>150px
| Occupied by Malay Heritage Centre
|Completed in 1843, it was commissioned by then-Sultan of Johor-Lingga-Riau Hussein Shah's son, Tengku Mohammed Ali. The building continued to house Ali's descendants until the 1990s, where it was renovated from 1999 to 2004 to be the Malay Heritage Centre, which opened in 2005. The Istana Kampong Gelam features elements of European and Malay architecture.
| <span style="display:none">Sultan Gate</span>85 Sultan Gate
| 1839–1843
|
|-
| Jurong Town Hall<br>150px
| Commercial
|Constructed between 1971 to 1974, it was built as the JTC's headquarters during the expansion of Jurong Town. As of 2018, Jurong Town Hall is used as a space for start-up companies. The geometric building was designed to symbolise the success of Singapore's industrialisation programme.
| <span style="display:none">Jurong Town Hall Road</span>9 Jurong Town Hall Road
| 1971–1974
|
|-
| Former Keng Teck Whay Building (now Singapore Yu Huang Gong)<br>frameless|150x150px
| Temple
|Established in 1831 by Straits Chinese merchants from Malacca, Keng Teck Whay was one of the earliest benefit societies established in Singapore. The building itself features Hokkien architectural elements, such as its curved roof ridge. There are also three structures within the Keng Teck Whay Building: an entrance gateway, an octagonal pagoda, and a hall. Ownership of the building was transferred to a Taoist organisation in 2010, where they renamed it to Singapore Yu Huang Gong and opened it as a temple in 2015.
| <span style="display:none">Telok Ayer Street 0150</span>150 Telok Ayer Street
| 1847–1875
|
|-
| Lim Bo Seng Memorial<br>150px
| Occupied by Citibank
|Constructed between 1948 to 1949 as a new branch office for HSBC, it was named after Governor-General of Malaya Malcolm John MacDonald. The building is known to be the site of a bombing in 1965. The Modernist and utilitarian building was one of the tallest buildings in Singapore at the time of its opening and the first air-conditioned office building in Southeast Asia.
| <span style="display:none">Orchard Road 0040A</span>40A Orchard Road
| 1949
|
|-
| Maghain Aboth Synagogue<br>150px
| Synagogue
|Consecrated on 4 April 1878, it was built for the expanding Jewish population in Singapore. The synagogue was only initially for men as Jewish men and women pray separately. A wooden gallery was added for women to pray, which was later turned into a permanent one in 1925. The Jacob Ballas Centre opened next to the Maghain Aboth Synagogue in 2007. The neoclassical-synagogue's interior focuses on the ark.
| <span style="display:none">Waterloo Street 0024</span>24 Waterloo Street
| 1878
|
|-
| Masjid Abdul Gaffoor<br>150px
| Mosque
|Commencing construction in 1907, it was to replace the Al-Abrar Mosque on Telok Ayer Street. It was named after Shaik Abdul Gafoor, who initiated its construction. The mosque features Saracenic elements, such as its cinquefoil arches in its prayer hall, as well as Neoclassical elements, such as Corinthian and Doric pillars. It is largely used by Tamil Muslims.
| <span style="display:none">Dunlop Street 0041</span>41 Dunlop Street
| 1907
|
|-
| Masjid Al-Abrar<br>150px
| Mosque
|Completed in 1855, the Masjid Al-Abrar replaced a small hut with the same name. Between 1986 to 1989, the mosque expanded. Built in the Indo-Islamic architectural style, it features two star and crescent-cladded octagonal minarets next to its entrance. Initially used mainly by those from the Chulia community, the Masjid Al-Abrar still serves Indian muslims, though muslims from other communities have also prayed at the mosque.
| <span style="display:none">Telok Ayer Street 0192</span>192 Telok Ayer Street
| 1829
|
|-
| Masjid Alkaff Upper Serangoon<br>150px|Alkaff Mosque Upper Serangoon Road
| Mosque
|Opened in 1932, plans for the mosque were ready by 1927, though the death of a partner for the firm that was meant to design to mosque delayed the project. The Masjid Alkaff Upper Serangoon is built in multiple architectural styles, such as Moorish-styled arches, Corinthian columns, and Neoclassical coffered ceilings.
| <span style="display:none">Pheng Geck Avenue 66</span>66 Pheng Geck Avenue
| 1932
|
|-
| Masjid Hajjah Fatimah<br>150px
| Mosque
|Commissioned in 1845 by Hajjah Fatimah, it was her thanksgiving to Allah for not being harmed when burglars broke into her home. Built in the Indo-Islamic architectural style, it also has some European features. A feature of the mosque is its octagonal minaret tower, which began to tilt after it was completed. Even though repairs were carried out, it still leaned slightly, giving it the moniker the "Leaning Tower of Singapore".
| <span style="display:none">Beach Road 4001</span>4001 Beach Road
| 1846
|
|-
| Masjid Jamae<br>150px
| Mosque
|
| <span style="display:none">South Bridge Road 0218</span>218 South Bridge Road
| 1830
|
|-
| Masjid Sultan<br>150px
| Mosque
|
| <span style="display:none">Muscat Street 0003</span>3 Muscat Street
| 1928
|
|-
| Ministry of Labour Building, Old, currently the Subordinate Courts Family and Juvenile Division<br>150px
| Government
|
| <span style="display:none">Havelock Square 0003</span>3 Havelock Square
| 1928
|
|-
| Nagore Durgha<br>150px
| Shrine
|
| <span style="display:none">Telok Ayer Street 0140</span>140 Telok Ayer Street
| 1893
|
|-
| Nanyang University Arch, Nanyang University Memorial and Nanyang University Library and Administration Building, currently the Chinese Heritage Centre<br>150px
| Arch, Memorial, Museum
|
| <span style="display:none">Yunnan Crescent</span>Yunnan Crescent, 42 Nanyang Avenue and 22 Nanyang Drive
| 1954–1956
|
|-
| National Museum of Singapore<br>150px
| Museum
|
| <span style="display:none">Stamford Road 0093</span>93 Stamford Road
| 1887
|
|-
| Parliament House and Annex Building, Old, currently The Arts House at the Old Parliament<br>150px
| Arts
|
| <span style="display:none">Empress Place 0010</span>10 Empress Place
| 1827
| , and
|-
| Old Tao Nan School, currently the Peranakan Museum<br>150px
| Museum
|
| <span style="display:none">Armenian Street 0039</span>39 Armenian Street
| 1906
|
|-
| Old Thong Chai Medical Institution<br>150px
| Commercial
|
| <span style="display:none">Eu Tong Sen Street 0050</span>50 Eu Tong Sen Street
| 1892
|
|-
| Padang<br>150px
| Multi-Purpose Venue
|
| Connaught Dr
| c. 1820s
|
|-
| Prinsep Street Presbyterian Church<br>150px
| Church
|
| <span style="display:none">Princep Street 0077</span>77 Prinsep Street
| 1931
|
|-
| Raffles Hotel<br>150px
| Hotel
|
| <span style="display:none">Beach Road 0001</span>1 Beach Road
| 1887
| , and
|-
| Saint Andrew's Cathedral<br>150px
| Church
|
| <span style="display:none">Saint Andrew's Road 0011</span>11 Saint Andrew's Road
| 1856–1861
|
|-
| Saint George's Church<br>150px
| Church
|
| <span style="display:none">Minden Road 0010</span>10 Minden Road
| 1910–1913
|
|-
| Saint James Power Station<br>150px
| Office
|
| <span style="display:none">Sentosa Gateway 0003</span>3 Sentosa Gateway
| 1926
|
|-
| Saint Joseph's Church<br>150px
| Church
|
| <span style="display:none">Victoria Street 0143</span>143 Victoria Street
| 1906–1912
|
|-
| Saint Joseph's Institution, Former, now the Singapore Art Museum<br>150px
| Museum
|
| <span style="display:none">Bras Basah Road 0071</span>71 Bras Basah Road
| 1867
|
|-
| Singapore Conference Hall<br>150px
| Multi-Purpose Venue
|
| <span style="display:none">Shenton Way 0007</span> 7 Shenton Way
|
|
|-
| Siong Lim Temple<br>150px
| Temple
|
| <span style="display:none">Jalan Toa Payoh 0184</span>184 Jalan Toa Payoh
| 1902
|
|-
| Sri Mariamman Temple<br>150px
| Temple
|
| <span style="display:none">South Bridge Road 0244</span>244 South Bridge Road
| 1827
|
|-
| Sri Srinivasa Perumal Temple<br>150px
| Temple
|
| <span style="display:none">Serangoon Road 0397</span>397 Serangoon Road
| 1855
|
|-
| Sri Temasek
