Imagine a pathway that glows in the dark, to make finding your way at night a little easier.

That's what Singapore's testing along a trail, that used to be part of an old railway track. The government has a big project underway to overhaul the rail line, and the luminous trail is just one of the ideas being tested.

The track glows because it's got strontium aluminate compounds embedded in it — the chemical is commonly found in glow-in-the-dark products, which absorb ultraviolet light in the day, to emit luminescence at night.

It glows! Image: Ng Yi Shu/Mashable

The tests are meant to determine which surface material would best result in a safer and more resilient trail, and government agencies will seek feedback from the public as well as measure the materials' durability.

The trial stretch is pretty short for now, just 100 m (328 ft) long. But if the idea works, we could see the material used more extensively across the 24 km (15 mi) long Rail Corridor project.

Close up of the trail Image: Ng Yi Shu/Mashable

When Mashable visited the area in the evening, the path was largely unlit, but track's glow was disappointingly feeble.

To get the dramatic pictures you see here, we used a longer exposure time to capture the glow coming off the road.

"I was hoping it was bright enough to see my face," said Xavier Tan, a 23-year-old who lives near the test track. "[It's] slightly underwhelming."

"I think it's quite interesting for this area as a test bed for all this material," said Judy Ni, who is also 23 years old.

After numerous attempt to take a good shot at the glow in the dark trial along rail corridor.. This is my first and the best shot, subsequent shots all cannot make it.. #railcorridor #glowinthedark A post shared by ChunYong Wong 黄镇勇 (@cyw0ng) on Jul 25, 2017 at 6:38am PDT

The Rail Corridor — which starts from the north of the island and ends at the city center — was formerly a railway that connected the city to neighbouring Malaysia.

The railway was closed in 2011 after a land-swap agreement between the two countries, and plans were later unveiled to redevelop the green stretch, which would include public housing and parks.