One thing I have come to understand about life is that whilst you think you might know a place, sometimes- as you dive deep- you find yourself not quite knowing as much as you thought you did, at all.
That's how it was for me with this side of East Coast Road.
I thought I knew this place.
East Coast Road is, after all, not new to me, having come by here many times before where I used to cycle along Ceylon Road to this stretch, or take the pedestrian pathway from Dunman Road to the back of Katong Shopping Center close to Haig Road.
Yet, today, a slower, more scenic walk peeled back everything I thought I remembered, and I found myself seeing things in a light which I had previously not seen before.
Could it be that I was coming from this side of the road?
That, instead of the east-bound side where all the shop houses are, I was on the opposite side where Roxy Square is, where The Flow is, where the taller buildings stand.
How is it that everything looks the same, yet looks so different?
How is it that you can be standing at a spot that you used to walk past, and yet, feel something completely different from what you used to feel before?
I thought I would feel a bit of nostalgia.
But, I didn't.
I didn't know what I was looking at.
I also didn't know what I was looking for.
Yet, here I was, standing at the junction of Brooke Road and East Coast Road, looking across to the row of shop houses across the traffic barrier of green, with no plan, no idea where I wanted to go, no idea even where I was going to begin.
See, you must know that East Coast Road is a long road.
It is also an old road, beginning from the junction where Amber Road and Haig Road meet, all the way, until you get to Siglap Road- after which it becomes Upper East Coast Road.
How the whole road used to be- last time- I don't know- but it begins from where the landmark of Katong Shopping Center is today.
I didn't take a picture of the shopping center this afternoon.
What I did take, however, is of the building right beside it- Odeon Katong.
To be honest I don't know if her official name is Odeon Katong.
What I do know is that she's not the newest building on the block, and she's called such because she used to be the Odeon cinema, and the place where the theater used to be is (likely) now Cornerstone Community Church, whose sign you will see on the exterior when standing on East Coast Road.
By the way, I wasn't standing anywhere near Odeon Katong when I took the picture.
On the contrary, I was opposite, on the other side, at the car park outside the building called Katong V, that today has a hotel on the upper floors, eateries on the second floor, and a supermarket on the first floor.
I have no idea what this Katong V building used to be.
But like many a building on this road, pretty sure she has a heritage story of her own.
East Coast Road gets progressively more vintage as one heads eastward.
That is, to the very least, until you hit the enclave of Joo Chiat and Joo Chiat Road, which is where this row of shophouses leads straight to.
The pictures of these shop houses are not very close, nor very clear.
My focus had been on the overhead bridge.
That doesn't mean I'm not interested in the shop houses.
It just means that one day I shall do a more intimate walk-through of this entire stretch hosting a variety of eateries that fit nearly every palate and every appetite, that it doesn't matter if you're craving for a bowl of Katong Laksa rich with coconut milk, wanting a plate of pasta, a piece of tenderloin steak, a bowl of butter chicken, a bowl of palak paneer, a good, butter-rich strawberry muffin, or a slice of banana pie.
If there's one thing I've noticed, however, it is that there're plenty of snacks to be sold from these shop houses here.
To the left of this bridge there is a bakery that offers pastries, muffins and pies, to the right of this bridge, further on, there's Kim Choo with their Nyonya kuehs, Dona Manis with their banana pies and chocolate pies, and right as you descend, an ice cream parlor so known for their buttery waffle cones that there're long queues whenever I walk past anytime.
What makes this section a cool place is that as much as there is to see on the east-bound side, the west-bound side doesn't lose out too.
No doubt there isn't much of a shop house here- the properties have moved in, revamped once, twice even- but there is heritage in the form of the Joo Chiat Police Station where Starbucks has now conquered and taken over.
It is a little difficult to see just how the interior of the police station once used to be- we can only use our imagination- but with the Hotel Indigo and the Holiday Inn Express located just behind, one can say, I guess, that this structure will not be going away anywhere anytime.
Same too, I should say, for the rest of the buildings this side of the road.
It don't matter whether the building has been recently revamped aka i12 Katong, or if the building hosts a group of tuition centers and enrichment centers.
It also don't matter if the building has been there since the 90s and serves the community clientele with their plethora of nail salons, hairdressing salons, TCM clinics, health foods, and specialized services.
All of these ain't going anywhere.
You know, it was no coincidence that I happened to be at the walkway bordering between Roxy Square, and the Starbucks of Old Joo Chiat Police Station.
It was also no coincidence, I too say, that the light from the setting sun hit the staircase just at the right time, illuminating the tiles that, on close discovery, shone with holographic, iridescent colors giving off glamorous, glossy, funky unicorn vibes.





















