Mosque Street
Mosque Street is named after the Jamae Mosque, referred to by Muslims as Masjid Jamae.
It is located on the South Bridge Road end of the street. This street is known as kit ling bio pi in Hokkien, which means "beside the King's temple".
Mosque Street was the site of ten stables.
Jamae Mosque is a well-known landmark in Chinatown with its entrance gate built in the South Indian style of the 1830s
Constructed between 1830-1835, it is one of three mosques in Singapore built by the early Chulia Indian immigrants, many of whom settled along Mosque Street in the early years of Singapore.