Sunday, October 10, 2010

Letter from Fiorn Lee

Dear Sabah Heritage,

Here are my thoughts, ideas and suggestions for the Atkinson tower issue. Thank you for your time. You efforts are very much appreciated. Hope the decision goes favourably. Perhaps petition for the developers to reconsider the design of their project. My notes below elaborates on it a bit more. It was also a response to some of the other comments that the other facebook viewers were making which i thought needed some re-orientation. Thanks again.

I agree with the fact that we should understand why we believe that the current proposal of a 16 storey shopping mall/hotel should not be approved of. We should evaluate both sides of this in the context of the historical development of Kota Kinabalu from the time when it was first established. Disregard the fact that whether the slip selling of Sabah to West Malaysia was a foolish mistake or rather a clever one. All history is part of the history of Kota Kinabalu. It is what shapes this place. All history, negative, positive, tragic, glorious- should be identified with as the aspect of place making generated from history.

From this, I believe that the most important factor to address and respond to in this proposed development is: whether the integrity and character of the Atkinson Clock Tower has been protected & maintained , and considered for in the proposal? I do agree that we may have been thinking about the yes or no, the extremities of both of it. But how about to find a balance? To maintain its value as a heritage site, a heritage precinct- rather than a heritage structure or tower. We should treat the area as heritage. Thus, from treating the surrounding area as heritage, any proposed developments eliminating around it must take into major & prioritized consideration that it must work with that heritage site's character, compliment it gracefully- not shun it without any respect or consideration for its earlier settling structures. Art feeds on art. Anticipated developments must feed from its predecessors.From this, it belongs to its place.

We need also question the proposal for an additional shopping MALL. Should it be a shopping MALL? Or rather, should it be a precinct? With an intentions for mixed-used, open-concept, incorporation into the natural & urban landscape. One that has perhaps commercial activity (to generate the economy as desired by most developers), accommodation, tourism (lookouts, public spaces), heritage sites, outdoor leisure, parks, greenery,performances, arts, galleries, eateries, some offices, mini museums etc. The word "shopping mall" creates an image of a building enclosed, not open to the city streets, internally orientated, a place to capture you within it so to disorientate you till you lose track of the sense of time from turning around in circles buying consumer goods that you don't really need or just the latter-window shopping. Is this what we really need in our city? Another shopping mall? Is there even enough demand to support the supply of that many stores and consumer goods?

If this development has to go forward (and it may just do), it can be done differently. It can be done properly. It can be done gracefully. It can be done with care for the heritage of our place.The aspect of heritage & landscape of that site should not be the afterthought of the designers of that proposed development. It should be the first foremost driving factor of the design.Be really inspired by history, don't just use it as a tag line to market an exhaustively reused building template for TYPICAL shopping malls.

Hope it helps. Let me know.

Sincerely,
Fiorn Lee

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Heritage Sabah takes State Agency to task

PRESS RELEASE FROM HERITAGE SABAH

KOTA KINABALU (23rd Sept 2010): Recently formed group Heritage Sabah wants a State agency to clarify its statement that commercial development next to the Atkinson Clock Tower will not have a negative impact on the 105-year-old structure.

The group led by architect/writer Richard Nelson Sokial said there was simply no logical argument to justify building a 16-storey shopping mall next to the city’s oldest historical landscape, with the excuse that it would enhance the aesthetic value of the clock tower.

He said this today in reaction to a statement by Sabah Housing and Town Development Authority (SHTDA) chairman Datuk Rubin Balang that the proposed project would instead “give a much needed facelist with proper infrastructure that would make the clock tower a real tourism attraction.”

Sokial said an upgrade of the area close to the clock tower should be translated into better paving, lighting and repairing broken staircases and signages to help promote the structure.

“In what way does a 16-storey commercial mall-cum-hotel built metres from the clock tower beautify the place?

“Based on approved building plans, the tower will only get the full view of the mall’s parking lot, which is actually the rear of the building,” he said in a statement.

He said based on his understanding of the development plan, it looks as though it will involve the cutting of a nearby hill.

“They will have to cut trees at the slope in order to build their mall. Is this their idea of upgrading? It does not enhance the tower. It just destroys its cultural significance,” he said.

On Tuesday, it was reported that the State Environment Protection Department (EPD) had rejected the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) for the proposed project, but that the developer could appeal.

The project which came into the limelight recently, is a joint venture between the SHTDA and a private developer.

Sokial pointed out that the proposed project at the city’s oldest heritage landmark would jeopardize any hope of further promoting the structure for tourism.

“This is not an ordinary project. It involves the well being of the city’s most enduring heritage landmark.

He added that one does not have to be a town planner or architect to see that the project does not enhance the lives of people living in the city.

He said based on feedback received from the public, there are too many malls in the city, some of which are still empty.

“Heritage Sabah represents the public who would rather see the clock tower and its surrounding area turned into a public recreation park for everyone to gather.

“We hope that the SHTDA will reconsider their plans and do the right thing for our city,” he said.

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