
...on a wall spanning 300m in length!
some adorable dolphin figure cravings on the walls
new and shiny
more goldfish blowers at the top
if you ever want to relate to about anything being long and endless, come to T3!
one carousel with another behind & another & another...
here we have the baggage out on the right
and the arrival/meeting hall on the left
another overview of the baggage collection area
it will definitely redefine long and endless for you!
happy spaces for people with flags and ply cards!
out at the arrival public area we have food & mainly tourist information booths
this long arrival walkway runs the whole length of the first floor
here we have snaking taxi queues which can be double up for hello kitty queuing as well!
not to mention F&B outlets
a walk along the meeting point lane
lined along the arrival stretch as also many stores
many of the few "look no hands" water fountains at every one of the 56 toilets in T3
you gotta get real familar with the seats we have here
and did I mention food?
even pillars have funky heat sinks on them
here is the coach bus waiting area...
with lots of accommodation for our 6 wheeled counterparts as well!
next stop we are going downunder...
...entering the spacey twilight zone
into the largest MRT train station in Singapore to date!
mmm spacey airlock wrapgates... I like!
the MRT station/linkway also now serves as an underpass
linking T2 and T3 together!
and here we are at good 'ol T2
the usual prohibited items on flight
view of Terminal 3 across the roads from Terminal 2
besides taking the underpass, you can also catch the T2-T3 skytrain service as well
Singaporeans: wahlau of course !YES YES YES GIMME!
Terminals 3 in Red, 1 in Blue and 2 in Yellow
another expensive fact of the day, is expensive really better?
which is undeniably the preferred choice for most...
overview of the inter terminal Skytrain platform
for those who gets a kick at train doors, heres a shot for you
a moment of zen
why why am I in the picture?
here we can see the trains buzzing along the rail-less concrete hollows
the skytrains run mainly on rubber wheels, with guidewheels enclosed by concrete walls
as you can see, no metal rails
so the trains travel like giant Tamiya race cars in contained tracks in a mechanical layman sense
An unobstructed dignified view of the good 'ol control tower
much better!
many of the glass lifts we see in littered all round T3
theres a total of 36 of them in total! (note the space age light slit)
a distant view of the lift well