Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Singapore Botanic Gardens' has mentioned 'Garden' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Tropical garden located in Singapore
The Singapore Botanic Gardens is a 162-year-old tropical garden located at the fringe of Singapore's Orchard Road shopping district.
It is one of three gardens, and the only tropical garden, to be honoured as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
It was declared the inaugural Garden of the Year, International Garden Tourism Awards in 2012, and received Michelin's three-star rating in 2008.
Early in the nation's independence, Singapore Botanic Gardens' expertise helped to transform the island into a tropical Garden City, an image and moniker for which the nation is widely known.
Contents 1 History 1.1 1859xe2x80x931876 1.2 1877xe2x80x931920s 1.3 1920sxe2x80x931985 1.4 1986xe2x80x93present 2 Attractions 2.1 National Orchid Garden 2.2 Rainforest 2.3 Ginger Garden 2.4 Botany Centre and Tanglin Gate 2.5 Jacob Ballas Children's Garden 2.6 Other attractions 3 UNESCO 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 7 External links
The first "Botanical and Experimental Garden" in Singapore was established in 1822 on Government Hill at Fort Canning by Sir Stamford Raffles, the founder of modern Singapore and a keen naturalist.
The Garden's main task was to evaluate for cultivation crops which were of potential economic importance including those yielding fruits, vegetables, spices and other raw materials.
This first Garden closed in 1829.
Eventually the Gardens played an important role during the "greening Singapore" campaign and Garden City campaign during the early independence years.
Here, the focus is on Garden City Vision, Horticulture, Taxonomic + Biodiversity Research, Recreation and Education.
Visitors are able to appreciate this unique collection of trees and plants through various thematic walks within the Learning Forest featuring giant trees, trees with interesting forms and barks of various textures, a conservation collection of rare fruit and nut species and a bamboo garden.
The garden is bordered by Holland Road and Napier Road to the south, Cluny Road to the east, Tyersall Avenue and Cluny Park Road to the west and Bukit Timah Road to the north.
Located on the mid-western side of the Garden, the hilly three-hectare site has a collection of more than 1,000 species and 2,000 hybrids of orchids.
Within the Orchid Garden there are a number of attractions such as the following -
The ground level serves as an exhibition area, showcasing information on the different hybrids named after VIPs who have visited the garden.
VIP Orchid Garden: located at the back of Burkill Hall, displays hybrids of the most popular VIP orchids.
Ginger Garden[edit]
Located next to the National Orchid Garden, this one-hectare garden brings together members of the family Zingiberaceae.
The garden houses a restaurant called the Halia Restaurant.
The garden was officially opened in 2003 and it took over the spot vacated by the previous Orchid Enclosure.
Jacob Ballas Children's Garden[edit]
The Children's Garden was named after its main donor Jacob Ballas, a Jewish-Singaporean philanthropist who died in 2004.
The National Parks Board claims it is Asia's first children's garden.
At the Children's Garden Visitor Centre there is a sculpture by the Israeli artist Zodok Ben-David.
Although it is considered part of the Botanic Gardens, the Children's Garden has its own entrance along Bukit Timah Road existing as a separate enclosure.
Other attractions include the Palm Valley, Bandstand area, Sun Garden and Sundial Garden.
Eateries within the garden include the one-Michelin-starred Corner House,[17] a casual fine-dining restaurant in a colonial bungalow; Casa Verde, a cafxc3xa9 at the Visitor Centre; and Halia Restaurant, a restaurant at the Ginger Garden.
Replica of the ancient Lepidodendrons or giant clubmosses at the Evolution Garden
the Gardens demonstrates the evolution of a British tropical colonial garden into a modern and world-class botanic garden, scientific institution and place of conservation and education.
The Tembusu tree (Faraea fragrans) featured on the reverse of the Singaporean five-dollar bill at Lawn E, Singapore Botanic Gardens Dendrobium Margaret Thatcher The Yuen-Peng McNeice Bromeliad Collection Dendrobium Bae Yong-joon, an orchid cultivar named after the South Korean actor Vanda Miss Joaquim, the national flower of Singapore Cygnus atratus in the Eco-Lake The Sun Garden (formerly known as the Sun Rockery) Flight of Swans sculpture installed in May 2006 at Swan Lake The Botany Centre Blocks, with a view of Calophyllum inophyllum and one of the wooden sculptures dotted around the complex.
The Singapore Botanic Gardens is situated at the heart of the city of Singapore and demonstrates the evolution of a British tropical colonial botanic garden from a xe2x80x98Pleasure Gardenxe2x80x99 in the English Landscape Style, to a colonial Economic Garden with facilities for horticultural and botanical research, to a modern and world-class botanic garden, scientific institution and place of conservation, recreation and education.
Through its well-preserved landscape design and continuity of purpose, the Singapore Botanic Gardens is an outstanding example of a British tropical botanic garden which has also played a key role in advances in scientific knowledge, particularly in the fields of tropical botany and horticulture, including the development of plantation rubber.
Criterion (iv): The Singapore Botanic Gardens is an outstanding example of a British tropical colonial botanic garden, and is notable for its preserved landscape design and continuity of purpose since its inception.
The authenticity of the Singapore Botanic Gardens is demonstrated by the continued use as a botanic garden and as a place of scientific research.