Ronald G. Knapp

Chinese Houses of Southeast Asia


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rel="nofollow" href="#uce015849-2d36-5b4a-8074-0f5c92450165">OEY DJIE SAN PLANTATION HOME

      Tangerang, Indonesia

      Cheong Fatt Tze blue mansion, Penang, Malaysia

       TJIOE FAMILY RESIDENCE (ST MARIA DE FATIMA CATHOLIC CHURCH)

      Jakarta, Indonesia

       TAN TIONG IE HOME

      Semarang, Indonesia

       SIEK FAMILY HOME (PRASADA MANDALA DHARMA)

      Parakan, Indonesia

       KWIK DJOEN ENG MANSION (INSTITUT RONCALLI)

      Salatiga, Indonesia

       LIEM COMPOUND

      Lasem, Indonesia

       HAN FAMILY ANCESTRAL HALL

      Surabaya, Indonesia

       HAN AND THALIB RESIDENCE

      Pasuruan, Indonesia

       NA SONGKHLA RESIDENCE

      Songkhla, Thailand

       POSAYACHINDA RESIDENCE

      Bangkok, Thailand

       WANGLEE MANSION

      Bangkok, Thailand

      Tjong A Fie mansion, Medan, Indonesia

       TRAN FAMILY HOME

      Hoi An, Vietnam

       PHUNG HUNG RESIDENCE

      Hoi An, Vietnam

       DIEP DONG NGUYEN HOUSE

      Hoi An, Vietnam

       AN HIEN GARDEN HOME

      Hue, Vietnam

       SYQUIA MANSION

      Vigan, Philippines

       YAP–SANDIEGO ANCESTRAL HOUSE

      Cebu City, Philippines

       QIU FAMILY RESIDENCES

      Meixian, Guangdong, China

       CHEN CIHONG MANOR

      Chaozhou, Guangdong, China

       DEE C. CHUAN VILLA

      Gulangyu, Xiamen, Fujian, China

       ZHANG BISHI MANOR

      Dabu, Guangdong, China

       Bibliography

       Acknowledgments

       Index

      The Siek family home, Parakan, Indonesia (page 190).

      A FEAST OF COLORS AND DESIGNS

      I do not know when professional architects of Chinese descent first began to design residences in Southeast Asia, or when their work began to change the built environment away from what was indigenous or traditionally Chinese. The buildings described in this book predate the rise of their profession and reflect the times when sojourners were beginning to transform themselves into settlers and could still exercise their personal choices.

      The illuminating text and beautiful photographs also bring back memories of the numerous homes in the region that I have lived in. The first home I remember was a standard public works residence built for junior civil servants in the Malay state of Perak, a state that the British claimed to “protect” on the Malay Peninsula. This was in Ipoh, the capital of Kinta, one of the richest tin mining valleys in the world and where many wealthy Chinese built their mansions. Unlike their fine homes, our small house was inspired mainly by Malay designs and was built on short stilts not more than four feet above the ground. The most striking feature was the covered corridor that connected it to the kitchen and servants’ quarters at the back of the house, some 20 yards away.

      My family went on to live in houses built by the Chinese themselves. In Ipoh, the Chinese who moved up the social scale from unskilled mining and plantation laborers preferred to live in rows of shophouses beside the main streets. We had our share of living in several of these. Away from towns, there were those who followed Malay practice and built their houses on stilts. But, when they were ready to build their family homes, mostly on the edge of town, they turned to models of the traditional homes they admired in China. They also noted the work of European architects and adapted their newer homes to the need to appear fashionable.

      We had the chance to live with one such upwardly mobile family and saw them transform a large Malay-type house into a new mansion. What struck me most was, the richer our host became, the more the Malay features about his house were replaced by things and shapes that were markedly Chinese or European. The overlap of Chinese ethnicity and Western modernity quickly edged out much of what was indigenous to the tropical environment.

      Later, when I began to meet Southeast Asian Chinese trained in Britain and elsewhere in the West to be professional architects, I became conscious of how instinctively eclectic my host in Ipoh had been in the choices he made for his extended home. Whether in its external structure, the use of interior space, the adornments on the roof, the plan of the garden, or the selection of furniture for the public and private rooms, there was dissonance in the midst of elegance accompanied by several corners of splendid harmony. By that time, I realized that many other newly rich Chinese also displayed varying degrees of eccentric individuality that made their residences unforgettable.

      Today, cautious public planners and venturesome private architects vie for the attention of new rich Chinese in every urban center. There is better appreciation of indigenous artistry, and the mixtures they offer are less whimsical and contrived. There is also brilliance surrounded by mediocrity. But overall the effect is one of confusion that the competing styles do little to minimize. It would appear that we need time to weed out the unmemorable so that, decades from now, the best of them