Advertisement

Geylang, oh Geylang! How mainland Chinese fell in and out of love with Singapore’s red-light district

  • Cheap rent, food and sex once drew Chinese foreign workers – and plenty of locals – to the enclave
  • But two decades on, Geylang is a shadow of its former self, a situation that saddens many of its residents

Reading Time:6 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Chinese restaurants in Geylang. Immigrants from China began to flock to the area during Singapore’s construction boom at the start of the new millennium. Photo: Clifford Lee

When Hu Fengkai first arrived in Singapore’s Geylang district from China in 2013, it was everything he had imagined it to be.

Advertisement

“In spoken Chinese, Geylang sounds like ya long or ‘dragon’s tooth’. A place with a name like that is bound to stir the imagination,” says the 31-year-old land surveyor.

“So when I finally reached Geylang six years ago, let’s just say I wasn’t disappointed,” he adds, with a sardonic grin.

It helped that he was joining a well-knit community of mainland Chinese migrant workers who had made Singapore’s famous red-light district their new home – drawn by cheap rent, cheap food and proximity to the city centre.

But after a run of almost two decades, this enclave is slowly disintegrating.

Advertisement

Singapore’s tightening foreign labour policies, heightened security after an unprecedented riot in 2013, and the sex trade going online have all chipped away at the country’s “Little Chinatown”.

Advertisement