The Eco-Link is 75 metres (246 ft) long and crosses over the Bukit Timah Expressway (BKE).[1][2] The bridge is shaped like an hourglass and at its narrowest point is 50 metres (160 ft) wide.[3] Opened in 2012, the Eco-Link is the first such ecological bridge in the Asia-Pacific.[1][4] The Eco-Link@BKE is intended to aid in wildlife conservation efforts in Singapore.[1][2][3]
Purpose
Until the Bukit Timah Expressway was built in 1986, Bukit Timah Nature Reserve and Central Catchment Nature Reserve were connected.[2] The Bukit Timah Expressway severed the connection, leading to a number of negative impacts to the wildlife living in those reserves.[2] Animals who tried to cross the expressway to get from one reserve to the other risked being killed by oncoming cars that often could not stop in time.[2][3]
For example, between 1994 and 2014, an average of two Sunda pangolins per year were accidentally killed in this manner. The Sunda pangolin is a critically endangered species within Singapore with possibly as few as 75 left in the country around the 2000s.[2][3] The barrier to movement between the two reserves also inhibited seed dispersal, reducing plant biodiversity, and reduced the available space for animals such as the common palm civet to live in.[2] Also, by isolating populations of animals it reduced the genetic diversity of each population.[3] Eco-Link@BKE was intended to address these issues by creating a safe crossing between the reserves, and allowing expansion of the animals' habitats and gene pools.[1][2][3]
Construction
Plans for an Eco-Link began in 1994, and was eventually announced in 2009.[2] Construction began in 2011 and the bridge was completed in 2012.[2] The Eco-Link had cost more than S$10 million to build.[3][5]
The bridge is covered with native vegetation, including trees and shrubs, which is intended to replicate a native forest ecosystem enticing to the animals.[2] There is a fence on the bridge to prevent certain large animals such as sambar deer and wild boar from crossing into Bukit Timah, which is too small and fragile to sustain them.[2]Camera traps and bat detectors are installed along the bridge to capture photos of animals crossing.[2][6]
Authorities hope that when the trees mature, Raffles' banded langur monkeys will use the Eco-Link to expand their range into Bukit Timah.[2][3][7] Raffles' banded langur is critically endangered in Singapore, with only about 60 individuals remaining, and was eliminated from Bukit Timah in 1987.[2][8] In 2021, a single langur was seen near Bukit Timah and might have used the Eco-Link to get there.[9] Authorities also hope that the Malayan colugo and red-cheeked flying squirrel will begin using the Eco-Link once the trees mature.[2][3]
In 2015, the National Parks Board began providing guided walking tours of the Eco-Link.[10] The walks continued through 2016 but were subsequently suspended to avoid potential disturbance to animals using the bridge.[10]
According to Singapore's Second Minister for National DevelopmentDesmond Lee, "It is reassuring that the bridge gives (animals) a better chance of survival, and, in fact, to flourish in this highly urbanised Singapore. Because Singapore is not just about concrete, or steel, or glass, or roads, or buildings, it is also about the green spaces that we work very hard and pro-actively to cherish, to protect, and more importantly, to enhance.”[7]
Successive bridges
With the first Eco-Link deemed a success for Singaporean wildlife, the country has decided to build a second Eco-Link structure, known as the Mandai Wildlife Bridge, over Mandai Lake Road. Located close to the Singapore Zoo as well as being a part of the wider Mandai Wildlife Reserve, construction works commenced in June 2017, and the bridge opened on 6 December 2019.