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Fabrications
The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand
Volume 32, 2022 - Issue 2
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Articles

The Unique Tradition of Timber Shophouses in Sarawak

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Pages 174-197 | Published online: 29 Aug 2022
 

ABSTRACT

Rendered, whitewashed masonry shophouses are a common vernacular type in Southeast Asia’s urban heritage districts. There were, however, parallel vernacular timber shophouse traditions where brick was not available. In much of nineteenth-century Sarawak, local timbers were used for structural frames, joinery, wall cladding and roofing shingles. Even when bricks became available, timber approaches were not completely replaced. Although timber shophouses are now uncommon in Southeast Asia’s large cities due to modernisation and development, outstation Sarawak is a rich repository of pre-1960 examples. Shophouse development in Sarawak was non-linear, with modern and vernacular approaches pursued contemporaneously. While timber construction was necessary due to the lack of bricks outside of the capital, Kuching, it is also because of the government’s unique approach to governance, hygiene, building regulation and approaches to representation before World War Two. Despite their ubiquity and longevity in many parts of Malaysia, timber shophouse types have generally been left out of national architectural historiographies This paper begins to address this gap by interrogating the architectural development of shophouses in Sarawak, within the context of the history of the type’s architecture and construction in Malaysia and Singapore.

Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Notes

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6. Crinson, Mark. “Dynamic Vernacular – an Introduction”. ABE Journal [Online] 9/10 (2016).

7. Vellinga, Marcel. “Re-Imagining Vernacularity in Southeast Asia and Oceania”. Sydney: A presentation at the 36th Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand, 11 July 2019.

8. For example, Beamish, Jane & Ferguson, Jane. A History of Singapore Architecture: The Making of a City. Singapore: G. Brash, 1985; Lim, Jon. “Singapore”. In Transforming Traditions: Architecture in the Asean Countries: Brunei, Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand edited by Lim, Jon. Singapore: ASEAN Committee on Culture and Information, 2001; Chan, Chee Yoong, ed. Post Merdeka Architecture: Malaysia 1957–1987. Kuala Lumpur: Pertubuhan Akitek Malaysia, 1987; Vlatseas, S. A History of Malaysian Architecture. Singapore: Longman Singapore Publishers, 1990; Yeang, Ken. The Architecture of Malaysia. Amsterdam: Pepin Press, 1992; Endut, Esmawee Haji “The Architecture of Malaysia”. In Transforming Traditions: Architecture in the Asean Countries: Brunei, Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand edited by Lim, Jon. Singapore: ASEAN Committee on Culture and Information, 2001; Too, Anthony. “The Chinese Shophouse”. In The Encyclopaedia of Malaysia: Architecture, edited by Chen, Voon Fee, 144, Singapore: Archipelago Press, 1998 and Too, Anthony. “The Shophouse Typology”. In 80 Years of Architecture in Malaysia, edited by Ngiom and Tay, Lillian, 176. Kuala Lumpur: PAM Publications, 2000.

9. For example, Zakariaa, Mohd Azuan, Kubota, Tetsu, and Toe, Doris Hooi Chyee. “The Effects of Courtyards on Indoor Thermal Conditions of Chinese Shophouse in Malacca”. Procedia Engineering Vol.121 (2015); Gamage, Wajishani, Lau, Stephen, Qin, Hao, and Gou, Zhonghua. “Effectiveness of Air-Well Type Courtyards on Moderating Thermal Environments in Tropical Chinese Shophouse”. Architectural Science Review, Vol.60, no. 6 (2017): 14 and Guerstein, Penny. “Traditional Shophouses of Peninsular Malaysia”. UIA International Architect, no. 6 (1984): 2.

10. For example, Kohl, David G. Chinese Architecture in the Straits Settlements and Western Malaya: Temples, Kongsis and Houses. Kuala Lumpur: Heinemann Asia, 1984 and Widodo, Johannes. The Boat and the City: Chinese Diaspora and the Architecture of Southeast Asian Coastal Cities. Singapore: Marshall Cavendish Academic, 2004.

11. For example, Yeang, Architecture of Malaysia, 134.

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13. For example, Yeoh, Brenda S. A. Contesting Space in Colonial Singapore: Power Relations and the Urban Built Environment. Kuala Lumpur: Oxford University Press, 1996 and Chang, Jiat Hwee, and King, Anthony. “Towards a Genealogy of Tropical Architecture: Historical Fragments of Power-Knowledge, Built Environment and Climate in the British Colonial Territories”. Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography Vol.32 (2011): 18.

14. Lim, Jon. “The ‘Shophouse Rafflesia’: An Outline of Its Malaysian Pedigree and Its Subsequent Diffusion in Asia”. Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 66, no. 1 (1993): 19.

15. A thorough study of this approach is Kohl, Malayan Chinese Architecture.

16. Lim, Shophouse Rafflesia, 49.

17. For example, Too, Shophouse Typology, 27; Too, Chinese Shophouse, 90 and Guerstein, Peninsular Traditional Shophouses, 23.

18. Lim, Shophouse Rafflesia, 64.

19. Kohl, Malayan Chinese Architecture, 178.

20. Waterson, Roxana. The Living House: An Anthropology of Architecture in South-East Asia. Singapore; New York: Oxford University Press, 1990, 1, 3.

21. Kohl, Malayan Chinese Architecture, 179.

22. Kohl, Malayan Chinese Architecture, 179.

23. Kohl, Malayan Chinese Architecture, 183.

24. Lim, Shophouse Rafflesia, 52.

25. Gullick, John Michael. “Early Kuala Lumpur”. In The Encyclopaedia of Malaysia: Architecture, edited by Chen, Voon Fee 144. Singapore: Archipelago Press, 1998, 74.

26. For example, John Turnbull Thomson’s 1846 painting Singapore Town from Government Hill Looking South.

27. Lim, Shophouse Rafflesia, 60–2.

28. Lim, Shophouse Rafflesia, 54.

29. This is true of Yeang, Architecture of Malaysia; Too, Shophouse Typology; Too, Chinese Shophouse and Guerstein, Peninsular Traditional Shophouses.

30. Ong, Edric. “Early Kuching”. In The Encyclopaedia of Malaysia: Architecture, edited by Chen, Voon Fee, 144. Singapore: Archipelago Press, 1998, 66–7.

31. Baring-Gould, S., and Bampfylde, C. A. A History of Sarawak under Its Two White Rajahs, 1839–1908. London: H. Sotheran, 1909, 74.

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34. Walker, Power and Prowess, 26.

35. Keppel, Henry The Expedition to Borneo of H.M.S. Dido for the Suppression of Piracy: With Extracts from the Journal of James Brooke, Esq., of Sarawak, (Now Agent for the British Government in Borneo). Two vols. Vol. One. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1846, 66.

36. Lockard, Craig A. “The Southeast Asian Town in Historical Perspective: A Social History of Kuching, Malaysia, 1820–1970”. PhD thesis, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1973, 23.

37. Lockard, Southeast Asian Town, 31.

38. Baring-Gould and Bampfylde, History of Sarawak, 64.

39. Keppel, Dido Vol. One, 139.

40. Brown, Brunei, 71.

41. Moor, J. H. “Trade with the West Coast of Borneo”. In Notices of the Indian Archipelago and Adjacent Countries: Being a Collection of Papers Relating to Borneo, Celebes, Bali, Java, Sumatra, Nias, the Philippine Islands, Sulus, Siam, Cochin China, Malayan Peninsula, Etc., edited by Moor, J. H. Singapore, 1837, 13.

42. Marryat, Frank S. Borneo and the Indian Archipelago with Drawings of Costume and Scenery. London: Longman & Co., 1848, 8.

43. Marryat, Borneo and the Archipelago, 6.

44. Pfeiffer, Ida. A Lady’s Second Journey Round the World. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1856, 46.

45. Kohl, Malayan Chinese Architecture, 42.

46. Keppel, Dido Vol. One, 41.

47. Brooke, Charles Anthoni Johnson. Ten Years in Sarawak. Vol. One. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1866, 22.

48. “Outstations”. The Sarawak Gazette, 30 March 1871.

49. Nov 1896 Saribas Report in “Simanggang and Kabong Monthly Reports June 1896 to March 1900”. In Sarawak Archives. Kuching: Sarawak Archives, 1900.

50. Vyner Brooke to Charles Brooke, 26 January 1905 in Brooke, Vyner. “3rd. Rajah’s Letters, 1904 to 1907”. In Sarawak Archives, index + 243 pages. Kuching: Sarawak Archives, 1915.

51. Mundy, Rodney. Narrative of Events in Borneo and Celebes, Down to the Occupation of Labuan: From the Journals of James Brooke, Esq. Rajah of Sarawak, and Governor of Labuan. Together with a Narrative of the Operations of H.M.S. Iris. Two vols. Vol. Two. London: John Murray, 1848, 289.

52. Beamish, History of Singapore Architecture, 13.

53. Ting, John. “Precarious Power, Forts and Outstations: Indigenisation, Institutional Architecture and Settlement Patterns in Sarawak, 1841–1917”. University of Melbourne, 2015, 77.

54. Ting, Precarious Power, Forts and Outstations, 103.

55. Chater, W.J. Sarawak Long Ago. Kuala Lumpur: Dewan Bahasa & Pustaka, 1969, 79.

56. Baring-Gould and Bampfylde, History of Sarawak, 155 and Sandin, Benedict. The Sea Dayaks of Borneo before White Rajah Rule. London: MacMillian, 1967, 64.

57. Pringle, Robert. Rajahs and Rebels: The Ibans of Sarawak under Brooke Rule, 1841–1941. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1970, 52.

58. Keppel, Henry. A Visit to the Indian Archipelago, in H.M. Ship Maeander. Vol. Two. London: R. Bentley, 1853, 42–3.

59. Keppel, Meander, Vol. Two.

60. Keppel, Meander, Vol. Two.

61. McDougall, Harriette. Sketches of Our Life at Sarawak London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1882, 24.

62. Belian (eusideroxylon zwageri) is also known as ironwood in Northwest Borneo (Handbook of Some Sarawak Timbers. Kuching: Sarawak Forests Department, 1999, 9).s.

63. Lim, Shophouse Rafflesia, 54.

64. For example, John Brooke Brooke to James Brooke, 21 May 1862 in Brooke, John Brooke. “Letters from John Brooke Brooke (1849–1866 to Sir James Brooke)”. In MSS Pac. s 90 Basil Brooke Papers Vol. 5. Oxford: Weston Library, Oxford University, 1866.

65. Boyle, Frederick. Adventures among the Dyaks of Borneo. London: Hurst and Blackett, Publishers, 1865, 14.

66. Boyle, Adventures among the Dyaks, 15.

67. Lim, Shophouse Rafflesia, 50.

68. Ong, Edric. “Malay Houses of Kuching, Sarawak”. The Sarawak Museum Journal Vol. XXXII, no. No. 53 (New Series) (1983): 36, 123.

69. Order of 27 April 1868 in Brooke, Charles. “H.H. The Rajah’s Order Book Volume 1 (1863 to 1890)”. In Sarawak Archives. Kuching: Sarawak Archives, 1890.

70. “A Change”. The Sarawak Gazette, 16 October 1871.

71. Pieris, Anoma. Hidden Hands and Divided Landscapes: A Penal History of Singapore’s Plural Society. First Edition ed. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2009, 31.

72. Beamish, History of Singapore Architecture, 12.

73. St.John, Spenser. The Life of Sir James Brooke: Rajah of Sarawak: From His Personal Papers and Correspondence. Edinburgh and London: William Blackwood and Sons, 1879, 391 and Ong, Malay Houses Kuching, 121.

74. Kohl, Malayan Chinese Architecture, 73–4.

75. Collecting seashells to burn lime also became common in coastal outstations like Kabong (for example, Oct 1897 Kabong Report in Simanggang and Kabong Reports 1896–1900).

76. Lim, Shophouse Rafflesia, 54.

77. A Change, Sarawak Gazette, 16 October 1871.

78. A Change, Sarawak Gazette, 16 October 1871.

79. The Sarawak Gazette, 1 January 1883.

80. 10 November 1892 Order in Brooke, Charles. “H.H. The Rajah’s Letters, April 1890 to Dec. 1892”. In Sarawak Archives, index + 365 pages. Kuching: Sarawak Archives, 1892.

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82. Oct 1897 Kabong Report in Simanggang and Kabong Reports 1896–1900.

83. Nov 1896 Kabong Report in Simanggang and Kabong Reports 1896–1900.

84. May 1897 Simanggang Report in Simanggang and Kabong Reports 1896–1900.

85. Fieldwork was carried out at most of these towns between 2008 and 2013.

86. Pringle, Rajahs and Rebels, 187.

87. Chater, Sarawak Long Ago, 40.

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89. Chater, Sarawak Long Ago, 39–40.

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91. Nov 1896 Saribas Report in Simanggang and Kabong Reports 1896–1900.

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