pitter-patter
by chit ko pe
THE
pitter-patter from the rain dropping on the car’s window pane is
soft, but it smashes the silence in the car I’m riding along with our Company’s
driver. It bears a resemblance to an affectionate situation experienced some 8
years ago, and I’m unknowingly dragged into thought.
It was one early morning
in June 2014 when Thai Airways International flight TG 950 touched down on the
tarmac of Copenhagen Airport. It drizzled outside dipping on the plane’s
window panes. All passengers aboard the plane were ushered in with its pleasant
and rhythmic pitter-patter. I arrived in Copenhagen, the capital of Denmark
well known for being the greenest city on the earth with amazing ambience,
colourful houses, castles, churches,
museums and parks. History has it that Copenhagen hosted the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change in December 2009. It produced the international
agreement and commitment to limiting global warming. It is later widely known
as the Copenhagen Accord to which every global environmental issue is
referred.
I was then
flying from Singapore with a stopover in Bangkok, Thailand. The travel
duration of 16 hours and 50 minutes from Singapore to Copenhagen got me
jet-lagged. Exhausted, but I was made afresh with the sights of astonishing
surroundings at Copenhagen Airport facilitated by an array of shops, bars,
cafes, restaurants, refreshment outlets and friendly services. It is learnt
that Copenhagen Airport is the largest one in Scandinavia and Nordic countries
as well as one of the oldest in Europe.
After enjoying a
short time there, I boarded a local train departing from Copenhagen Airport to
Copenhagen Central Station located at the heart of the city. It took about 13
minutes. With the biggest and busiest railway hub status in Denmark, Copenhagen
Central Station with seven platforms and 13 tracks has been serving domestic
and international commuters since 1911. Copenhagen proudly boasts its
historical and significant places of interest such as Tivoli Amusement Park,
Christiansborg Palace, Rosenborg Palace, Nyhavn Harbour, The Round Tower,
Amalienborg Castle, Kastellet & The Little Mermaid and others to name a
few.
There, I hopped
onto an international train bound for Lund, Sweden which was the last
destination on my itinerary list. Actually, I was heading to Lund University
which is a public research university founded in 1425. At the University, the
international safety conference would be held under the backdrop of Achieving
Sustainable Construction Health and Safety. It was organized by the International
Council for Research and Innovation
in Building and Construction (CIB, W099) which is a worldwide network of over
5000 experts from about 500 organizations including more than 130
universities. I was there to read my research
paper like other participants – subject matter experts, and academicians pursuing
doctoral studies. Despite working in the private sector, I was then somewhat
linked to academic networks after completing a master’s degree at the National
University of Singapore (NUS) in 2012.
A strait called
Oresund divides Denmark’s Copenhagen and southern Sweden. Cars, ferries or
trains are the essen tial commuting
modes between these two regions. Our train passed through the Oresund Bridge
consisting of an 8 km bridge, a four-kilometre man-made island and a
four-kilometre underwater tunnel. It was awesome to have such moments of
physically being with one of the most popular bridges in the world. It was like
a dream come true. At end of the bridge, Malmo was the first stopover on the
Sweden side before reaching my final destination, Lund with
a total train travel time of about an hour. Lund Cathedral
built around 1100 is Lund’s a towering landmark that I visited later.
I was lost in
thought a while ago. The bridge on which our Company’s car is passing through
now is Thanlyin Bridge across Bago River, not the one abroad mentioned above.
At its mid-span, a gust of wind brings a sudden shower hitting the car’s window
panes with pitter-patter that awakens me from memoirs. Oh! I’m on the way to
work!
At present, it is raining at Thilawa
Special Economic Zone in Thanlyin which houses factories, workshops, plants,
shops, workplaces and offices including ours. With dark clouds looming in the
sky, a non-stop downpour is certainly expected throughout the day. There will
be more pitter-patter on the office’s window pane just next to my desk, I
fondly imagine.
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