Members of the Chinese media speaking to Datin Pat Lim at the event |
Tan Chai Puan speaking passionately about preserving the precious heritage of JB |
In 2004, when the Johor Baru Tiong Hua
Association moved to its new premises in Taman Sri Tebrau, they reached a
decision to convert their old building on Jalan Tan Hiok Nee into the JB
Chinese Heritage Museum. When the museum
was officially opened in 2009 by previous Johor Menteri Besar Dato’ Abdul Ghani
Othman, he declared the road a Heritage Walk and local businesses like
coffee-shops and a traditional charcoal bakery experienced a business revival
as local and foreign tourists made this street a regular destination. The building at No. 56 dubbed the Red House, hosted
art and cultural events and served as an impressive backdrop for many
successful cultural events including the live nationwide Astro TV telecasts of
Lunar New Year eve countdowns.
Tan, the Head of the Arts & Cultural
Development Department of Southern University College and an Advisor to the
Malaysia-China Arts & Cultural Association, is passionate about JB’s
heritage and in activities that encourage every community to get to know each
other better. As JB has been rapidly
developing over the past two years, he is keen about preserving the city’s
character and unique identity and was glad that just by word of mouth, the
group of locals who turned up comprised a good mix of Chinese, Malay, Indian
and Eurasian. I trust they were also
keen to meet Datin Patricia Lim Pui Huen, great-grand daughter of Wong Ah Fook,
and hear her views as a professional historian and author of several well
researched books on Johor history.
It was nostalgic to recall that the JB we once
knew used to have a coast road and magnificent houses including the bungalows
popularly known as the Spanish houses and elegant bungalows built on the
hillock along Jalan Skudai used to overlook the Johor Straits. The landscape in this area is changing in the
name of development and towering condos and apartments will soon shield the
straits from Jalan Skudai. From her
research, Lim said that JB still has about 20 heritage buildings and cited some
interesting examples locally and abroad where such buildings and old shops can
have economic value and have been successfully put to adaptive use.
The signboard to the oldest building in JB is hidden behind overgrown plants at Jalan Dato Menteri 1/1 |
She said the oldest building in JB is the old public
library (Perbadanan Perpustakaan Awam Johor) at Jalan Dato Menteri 1/1 and more
effort should be made to preserve heritage buildings such as this and others
like the Johor Military Force building, the Dato Jaafar building and the JB
jail.
She explained that while the old
mansion at Jalan Bukit Meldrum that locals fondly refer to as the Wong Ah Fook
mansion, may not be listed in Wong Ah Fook’s will or his wife’s will, it may
have been their holiday home here as they lived in Singapore. Lim recalled that when she was a child, she
and her father used to visit the mansion located near Jalan Quek Keng Kang that
belonged to Wong Ah Yim, Wong Ah Fook’s nephew and business manager.
The old public library is almost overtaken by jungle! |
It was agreed that more in-depth research must
be done to establish the history of the old mansion but its turn of the century
architecture deems it a heritage building and it should be preserved. Initial investigations revealed that the land
on which the old mansion stood was bought and sold several times and when rows
of shops were built around it, the old mansion was no longer visible from the
main roads and made it virtually forgotten.
The old mansion was formerly used as a school before it was rented out
and over time, the building gradually turned decrepit as a squatter settlement.
The Johor Gu Miao or Ancient Temple is carefully preserved while high-rise buildings are built around it |
Lim discussed several examples of how heritage
buildings have been transformed into prestigious tourist attractions that proudly
adorn travel brochures. She cited the Cheong
Fat Tze Mansion, better known as the Blue Mansion in Georgetown that was
successfully restored into a unique destination for Heritage homestays, guided
tours and venue for special events.
Another
interesting heritage house in Georgetown is Suffolk House, former residence of
Sir Francis Light, the founder of the British settlement on Penang Island that
was rebuilt in 1805 and later neglected but restored to its former glory as a
stunning example of an Anglo-Indian garden house. Suffolk House is now an elegant venue for
social and corporate events, offers guided tours and is also open to the public
to enjoy its charms when they have lunch, afternoon tea and dinner in the
charming restaurant.
Dr Shan reciting the poem that he was inspired to write about the old mansion at Bukit Meldrum |
She pointed out that Hardwicke House in
Georgetown was creatively preserved for adaptive use when the owners built a
31-storey L-shaped skyscraper around the heritage building. A similar example of such conservation here
is how Menara Ansar and the Puteri Pacific Hotel are built around the 100-year
old Johor Gu Miao or Ancient Temple
along Jalan Trus because of the temple’s strong significance in Johor’s rich
history. Similarly, the owners of the
old mansion could preserve the heritage building and challenge their architects
to come up with a creative building – not necessarily as impressive as the 44-storey
skyscraper as the China Central Television headquarters in Beijing – but just
as creative and functional!
It was such an eye-opener to hear various views
and ideas from likeminded locals from different walks of life who share a
common passion in preserving the character of our city that I was determined to
look up the oldest building in JB (and I did!). The event came to a close on a poignant note
with Dr Shanmugam Subbiah’s recitation of the poem that he was inspired to
write about the old mansion on Bukit Meldrum.
It was ironic that even while we were discussing the issues concerning
our city’s heritage buildings, excavators were already moving into place and on
that same night, the old mansion was demolished.
A version of this article was published in The New Straits Times, Streets Johor on 9 May 2014
So surprise! I thought the old Public Lib was turned into some other purpose. I always go here whenever i need to research about work related informations.
ReplyDeleteThat was in early 2000's. I liked the atmosphere there even though the building was old. It reminds me of my childhood place, where we lived near an old school building. (The upper floor is made of wooden planks)
So sad!The building now left to rot . MBJB should take action to preserve the building .