Bok House

The Bok House was an old mansion on Jalan Ampang in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, demolished in 2006. The compound where the building stood is a block away from the Petronas Twin Towers, owned by a private trustee managed by the Bok family.

Bok House
General information
StatusDemolished
LocationKuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Address121, Jalan Ampang, Kuala Lumpur, 50450 Kuala Lumpur, Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Town or cityKuala Lumpur
CountryMalaysia
Coordinates3°09′30.5″N 101°42′33.7″E
Current tenantsLe Coq d'Or (1958–2001)
Construction started1926
Completed1929
Opened1929
Closed2001
Demolished2006
OwnerChua Cheng Bok
LandlordChua Cheng Bok
Technical details
Floor count2
Design and construction
Architecture firmSwan & Maclaren
Other information
Number of restaurants1
Number of bars1

History

The mansion was designed by Swan & Maclaren in 1926 and it was completed in 1929 for a local millionaire, the Cycle & Carriage owner Chua Cheng Bok. In the 1958 and up until its closure in 2001, the mansion housed an upscale restaurant and bar called the Le Coq d'Or.

Demolition and controversy

In 2001, the building was abandoned by the restaurant operator. Being located on a high-value land, plan for redevelopment emerged but it was opposed by local conservation groups. Initially, the local government denied there were plans to redevelop the land and hence, the possibility of demolishing the building. Local conservation groups later tried to lobby the government to gazette the mansion for its historical value but to no avail.

On December 15 2006, the mansion was demolished, resulting in public outcry. The building was 77 years old when demolished.

After demolition of the mansion, on 21 December 2006 Culture, Arts and Heritage Minister Datuk Seri Dr Rais Yatim challenged dissenters to prove that Bok House is of historic value. According to him:

"The cost of rehabilitating Bok House will be high and there is no significant history or aesthetic value attached to the building"

"The Government could also not save Bok House from being demolished because it is privately-owned and not registered as a heritage building."

The list of registered heritage buildings in Malaysia is in fact determined by the government.

The plot of land where Bok House once stood remain vacant till late 2012, when it was boarded up and construction on a proposed W Hotel commenced. The W Kuala Lumpur Hotel was opened in 2017.[1]

gollark: Hmm, now CraftOS-PC won't run it again because it doesn't support readAll on binary file handles, troubling. I may have to add fallbacks.
gollark: PotatOS does bizarre exotic stuff all over the place, and your OS doesn't do anything hugely cursed, so who knows why.
gollark: PotatOS broke in it for a while, but I fixed that, without actually figuring out why.
gollark: It still runs all (most) CC programs.
gollark: It has lots of extra features like that.

References

  1. Sharen Kaur (12 September 2016). "W Kuala Lumpur Hotel". New Straits Times.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.