In the past decade, increasing demand and rapid developments in classical and quantum sciences resulted in advanced novel multipixel single photon detector arrays engineered on a single electronic chip. Silicon single photon avalanche detector (Si-SPAD) is one of the mainstream solution for low level light detection in visible and near-infrared wavelength region due to the dependable amplification of light signal. This thesis mainly focusses on three key experiments to showcase the potential applications of a single photon detector (Megaframe 32) consists of 32×32 square array Si-SPADs with picosecond timing circuits. With ≈ 50 ps timing resolution, each SPAD can perform time-correlated single photon counting independently. First, the concept of multiplexed single-mode wavelength-to-time mapping (WTM) of multimode light was investigated. The spacetime imaging capability of the Megaframe was then demonstrated by imaging the spatial modes emerging from a few-mode fibre enabling WTM of spatial modes. Finally, timeresolved discrete imaging in laser inscribed photonic lattices was demonstrated. By placing a photonic lattice in a linear cavity and re-injecting the output mode profile back to the lattice, the propagation of light was measured in quasi-real time manner. The experimental demonstrations using Megaframe will find applications in Raman spectroscopy, soliton imaging, quantum optics, and discrete waveguide optics