Ley Lines Singapore ✦

. Practitioners believe the island is crisscrossed by "Dragon Veins" ( ), which are essentially conduits of spiritual energy ( Energy Flow

Fort Canning Hill → Old Parliament House → Cavenagh Bridge → The Fullerton Hotel.

A detailed of Singapore's lost hills and rivers. ley lines singapore

Singapore is incredibly dense. If you draw a straight line through any highly developed city, you will inevitably connect multiple historic sites, temples, skyscrapers, and parks purely by chance.

Originally placed at the mouth of the Singapore River to ensure a constant flow of good fortune, it remains carefully aligned to face the auspicious East. Spiritual Hubs and "Vortexes" Singapore is incredibly dense

The line ends at , near the old Changi Point bungalows and a pre-war kampong site. At low tide, one can see ancient shell middens—evidence of early human habitation that may have selected this spot due to the ley’s end energy.

Before we map Singapore, we need to understand the term. The concept was popularized in 1921 by Alfred Watkins, a British antiquarian, who noticed that ancient sites (stone circles, standing stones, hill forts) in England fell into straight lines. He called these lines "leys." Spiritual Hubs and "Vortexes" The line ends at

This Western concept of ley lines has a profound parallel in Eastern traditions, particularly in the ancient Chinese art of . Long before Alfred Watkins drew his lines on a map, Chinese geomancers were studying the flow of qi (pronounced "chee"), the vital life force energy that they believed courses through the natural world. In feng shui, the pathways along which qi flows are often called dragon lines or dragon veins .

Over the past 20 years, paranormal researchers and dowsers have attempted to map Singapore’s invisible grid. While no official government map exists (the authorities are predictably skeptical), online forums and geomancy groups have compiled compelling data.

Yet, a niche but passionate community of local geomancers, dowsers, and spiritual tourists insists that Singapore is, in fact, a powerful nexus of global ley lines. From the bedrock of Fort Canning Hill to the reclaimed shores of Marina Bay, the argument rages: Is there truly an invisible web of energy beneath our MRT tunnels?

Proponents believe that ley lines:

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