Are they building a rainforest at Changi Airport?

DavidBrown

Well-Known Member
15+ year member
In the April 2016 National Geographic there is a story about urban parks and how they are connecting city dwellers with nature.

There is an offhand mention of a rainforest being built at the Changi Airport in Singapore.

Does anyone here know what this is about? Are they building a zoo-type rainforest exhibit with real plants and animals or is it something more artsy without actual live organisms?
 
it is this, I assume: Raising bar for luxury airports: Singapore's Jewel Changi to get indoor rainforest | Lifestyle from CTV News
An indoor living forest of trees, plants, ferns and shrubs that spans five levels. The world’s tallest indoor waterfall. Walking trails and gardens. These are among some of the features planned for the Jewel Changi Airport, a steel and glass biodome structure that will grace the Singapore skyline and raise the bar in luxury airports.

Last week, crews broke ground on the Jewel Changi Airport outside Terminal 1, a project that will turn what used to be an open-air parking lot into a sprawling, 134,000 sqm (1.4 million square feet) retail, travel and leisure complex spanning 10 floors -- five underground floors and five levels above ground.

The addition would widen the gap between the Changi Airport and its international rivals, already held at arm’s length by the Singapore facility's variety of innovative features and amenities. Think movie theater, butterfly and orchid gardens, four-storey indoor slide and gaming entertainment deck.

Changi Airport owns bragging rights to having been named world’s best airport nine times at the World Travel Awards and two years running at the Skytrax World Airport Awards.

The specs for the Jewel, meanwhile, are impressive and ambitious.

The ‘lifestyle’ complex is not only meant to turn the airport into a Singaporean destination in and of itself, but it’s also meant to help increase the airport’s passenger handling capacity to 24 million passengers a year.

The Forest Valley and Gateway Gardens, for instance, will house an indoor collection of plants and trees across 236,806 square feet, with landscaping features that will include waterfalls and walking trails.

The centerpiece of the airport, meanwhile, will be the Rain Vortex, a 40-meter tall waterfall that will cascade through the core of the complex. Come nightfall, the water feature will illuminate in a light and sound show. The Rain Vortex is set to become the largest indoor waterfall in the world.

Other features will include walking trails, playgrounds, conservatories, dining outlets, and retail options that include high-end luxury brand names and home-grown brands.

In a bid to strengthen the region as a cruise hub, the Jewel Changi Airport will house a lounge for fly-cruise and fly-coach passengers, offering services like ticketing, boarding passes and baggage transfer.

The terminal will also feature early check-in services, allowing passengers to check-in and deposit their bags hours before their flight so that they can take advantage of the facilities and amenities.

Jewel will also be home to a 130-room YOTEL hotel.

The Jewel Changi Airport is scheduled for completion in 2018.
 
Thanks, Chlidonias. I'm sure that is what the National Geographic story referred to.

So there will be lots of live plants, but no non-human animal exhibits.
 
The Jewel project will only have plants, no animal exhibits are planned.

A bit of trivia: Changi Airport had previously considered creating a rainforest exhibit with marmosets, but it settled for the butterfly garden (located in the transit area of Terminal 3) instead.
 
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