How Orchard Road Reflects Singapore’s Evolving Youth Culture

In 1983, a group of teenagers in neon shirts and indoor sunglasses was doing something unprecedented in the corridor of a newly opened Orchard Road mall: nothing useful. They were loitering, breakdancing to cassette players, and taking up space that business owners had other plans for. Within two years, they had a name—the Centrepoint Kids—and the street had its first real evidence of what it would become. Not just a shopping destination, but a place where the youth figured things out.

What people today experience as Orchard Road shopping carries forty years of that history in it: generations working out what to wear, who to be with, what kind of city they wanted to grow up in. The shops have changed considerably; tracing four decades of that shift reveals as much about the people as it does about the street.

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