Here they are: the winners of our Readers' Choice Awards 2015!
Thousands of you cast your ballot in this democratic election. Here's who you picked for best restaurant, best bar, best local shop and lots else.
The tribe has spoken—loud and clear. This year’s Readers’ Choice Awards saw 50 percent more ballots cast than in 2014, with readers voting in the thousands! Clearly, y’all got opinions! Well, here’s where we shut up for once and let you do the judging. Here are your winners.
A Spa Esprit Group-bankrolled, semi-alfresco restaurant doing dishes made with seasonal produce grown in its own backyard in collaboration with the Edible Gardens folks—is there any surprise that Open Farm Community took one in three votes cast in this category?
We’re scratching our heads over this one. We thought you loved eggs benedict, syrup-soaked waffles and other Instagrammable goodies? No, turns out you actually love cauliflower sabbich, lamb shakshouka and far more exotic late-morning foods. Good for you!
One of the coolest places for coffee snobs to brunch, this industrial-chic spot is packed to the gills most weekends, with hip folks clamoring for house-roasted beans (prepared pour over or Aeropress style, of course) and daintily portioned, hippie-chic plates of ox cheek eggs Benedict and pancakes
It turns out that what you really want is not a high-end food market, but just the opportunity to dine as usual at your favorite restaurants, except with slightly more affordable set menus. What could be more ideal, then, than SRW’s $25-40 lunches and $35-55 at places like Bacchanalia, Garibaldi and UNA.
There were a bunch of exciting new contenders in this category this year, chief among them the debut of Singapore Cocktail Week. But at the end of the day, there’s nothing quite like after-work pints of beer, lederhosen, bratwurst, big hats and live cover bands at Clarke Quay.
Speakeasies come and speakeasies go, but a solid hotel bar with a creative signature cocktail menu and an adorable head bartender (hi, Tom Hogan!) is a rare thing. Anti:dote went from Best New Bar last year to Best Bar this year, toppling Tippling Club. Also: check out their newly launched Revivals, a new menu of jazzed-up classic cocktails.
Ok, it's not new exactly, but it's got an all-new menu, a complete moody, manly makeover and a brand new bartender and sommelier--Tomas Gejodos of Restaurant Andre and Burnt Ends fame--at the helm, whipping up barrel-aged cocktails like Sazeracs, Last Words and Espresso Martinis, as well as stocking some hard to find spirits and 11 wines by the glass. The food menu is solid comfort food and drinking snacks like pickled Czech cheese, pork and veal meatballs with romesco and oxtail orecchiette.
For yet another year, Wine Connection’s affordable artisanal cheese and charcuterie boards, bottles starting at a sweet $35 and friendly service prove unbeatable for the fancier competition.
Local pride for the win! This long-standing microbrewery does pilsners, IPAs and stouts, along with a slew of seasonal brews and single-hops specials. They’ve got outlets all over town, but our favorite has got to be the Clarke Quay standby.
It’s moving to Clarke Quay in 2016, and also changing ownership from Lincoln Chen to the much bigger Genting Group—but that hasn’t diminished your love for Singapore’s longest-running nightclub in the least. See you at ZoukOut next month.
Not block parties in the streets, nor beer pong tournaments on the beach. What you actually love (this year) are cocktails, bubbly, bean bags, DJs—all happening poolside at the W Singapore Sentosa Cove. The next one is on Nov 29, and entry is $35.
Singapore’s chicest beach club wins another year, thanks to its gorgeous wood-and-glass restaurant (serving a classic but delicious menu of mains and snacks), the nautical blue-and-white color scheme, the abundant lounge furniture and DJs spinning on the evenings.
It’s been the year of low-slung, cozy rooftop bars, but there’s no comparison to ridiculously gorgeous panoramic views of the city and the Straits beyond. 1-Altitude’s garden terrace vibe, great food and pretty people here have beaten out last year’s winner.
This womenswear label really upped the ante for local online retailers going brick-and-mortar: a 3,300 sq ft space at Ion Orchard that stocks not only their garments, but also international glossies by Magpie, local fiction and poetry by Math Paper Press and an in-house cafe managed by Plain Vanilla Bakery.
A go-to for dapper dudes, this multi-label e-commerce site stocks well-curated garments and accessories from Benjamin
Barker and Happy Socks, along with local labels Gnome & Bow and Hypergrand and many others. They have a brick-and-mortar boutique at Dhoby Ghaut, but with free shipping Singapore, you could just stay home.
For a second year in a row, Singapore Airline’s budget option comes out on top. Not resting on their laurels, they’ve been wildly expanding their routes, this year starting flights to Jeddah, Hangzhou and, perhaps most excitingly, Melbourne. One-way tickets in January start at $408.
We really thought it would be Thailand again like last year, but we guess you’re taking a break from amazing markets and spicy food and planning ahead for cherry blossoms and skiing. Who can blame you? Visit here for tons more travel ideas.
It’s one of our favorite parts of the Singapore skyline, with its vertical gardens and curvy facade. It doesn’t hurt that the spa is by St Gregory, many of the rooms overlook Hong Lim Park and that the lunch buffet at Lime is both affordable and solid.
Of course it doesn’t hurt that the billion-dollar, 101-hectare green zone hosts exciting concerts and music festivals and houses some of our favorite restaurants. But the big highlight, we think, is the impressive Flower Dome, a high-ceilinged, temperature—controlled structure housing Mediterranean and semi-tropical flora.
Observe nocturnal animals on foot or by tram if you’re lazy like us. And if you go in the next couple of weeks, you can catch their annual themed event Mystica, which will involve bioluminescent decorations, LED light twirling and more. See page 8 for more info.
A mainstay at our Readers’ Choice Awards, one of Singapore’s biggest and most popular gym chains wins again, thanks no doubt to its abundant number of branches (17 islandwide) and its good mix of standard equipment, complimentary towel service and diverse classes.
With two well-placed branches—one at Pacific Plaza on Scotts Road and the other at Ocean Financial Centre—True Yoga has all the advantages of a big brand but without compromising on a relaxing atmosphere. Pair that with diverse yoga offerings, off-beat dance classes and visiting big-deal teachers, and it’s easy to see why it has won again this year.
This VivoCity gym not only does yoga and Pilates classes, but also more intense MMA and TRX classes (the latter uses bodyweight and resistance to get you all toned and strong). They’re most proud of their proprietary RIOT, a 45-minute class involving cardio, calisthenics and weight training.
The lotus-shaped, Marina Bay Sands museum has more than kept up with the high-quality programming of last year (we still miss Annie Leibovitz), with its super-arty ArtScience late events, the beautiful Deep Sea exhibition and, showing now, an interactive walk through the workings of the Large Hadron Supercollider.
The Orchard stalwart has won again this year, thanks to its regular programming of huge-name, often long-dead artists. On display till Dec 6 is a group show by Chilean artist Eduardo Guelfenbein and French sculptor Marie-Madeleine Gautier and French painter Jean-Francois Larrieu (all alive, thankfully).
Their regular jazz shows, small plays and classical concerts aside, Esplanade has really been on a roll the second half of this year, with back to back big-deal productions of Murakami adaptation Kafka on the Shore from Japan and an all-male production of A Clockwork Orange.
Year after year, you love putting on flowy blouses, flower tiaras, politically-dubious feathered headgears and cut-off shorts, and heading to an all-day indie music festival at Gardens by the Bay. Who wouldn’t? On Jan 20, 2016, you can get excited for Thundercat, Purity Ring, Beach House and many others.
Second-hand shopping online is extra sweet when the app founder is local and got a massive injection of $7.8 million in funding just last year. Putting up your pre-loved goods, buying other people’s, laughing at absurd listings and arguing with vendors is a time-honored part of this experience, and it is all but a given that Carousell is your favorite local startup.
Aided no doubt by their Keong Saik location and their slew of trendy new restaurants like The Daily Roundup and Neon Pigeon, The Working Capitol has become a real community fixture, offering not just work space, but also lots of events and seminars open to the public.
When she’s not spending weekdays in Jakarta for her mobile commerce platform Wobe, this Singaporean startup wiz and philanthropist is organizing Culture Kitchen (which got a big $20,000 value grant from Jetstar this year) for migrant worker communities and locals to mingle. Read more about her in our interview here.
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