Showing posts with label kuching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kuching. Show all posts

The soft edge




Soft edge is defined as strips of waterfront land occupied by bushes consist of trees and thick understorey. The area can be either untouched natural forest or disturbed landscape (replanted backyard area of village houses or naturally regrown, occasionally with weeds). In Kuching's context, it is part natural landscape, part cultural landscape. Seen from the river it is a beautiful landscape. From the land, villagers can get glimpses of the modern city along the opposite bank through framed views.

This strip of meandering landscape, visible from the urban area of the southern side it seems like a thick bold line drawn between the water and the land. It is a beautiful gesture that forms the most beautiful natural setting Kuching city possess for centuries, while on the south bank the city developed and urbanised over the last hundred years.

See how this beautiful landscape of Kuching being captured by photographers:


Kuching, Sarawak (Borneo), East Malaysia - Kuching Waterfront Pier ~ Sunset
Originally uploaded by YYZDez



Sunny Day At Sarawak River
Originally uploaded by thienzieyung




Once Upon A Time In Kuching
Originally uploaded by onggon ~ im back



Perahu Tambang
Originally uploaded by Roslan Tangah (aka Rasso)




Aerial map below shows the existing soft edge along the Sarawak River. You can see the soft edge along the northern bank is almost unbroken continuously running as far as your eyes can see, perhaps the full length of the river from the river mouth to the upper tributaries where the jungles and mountains are. At the city the line is only punctuated at jetties and most obvious at the Astana where the clearing allows un-disrupt views from the Governor's residence

Over the last few years there are changes along the edge opposite the city centre. I noticed the first change during my last visit in 2006 and it was recorded as the following shot. On the map the effected areas are marked in blue lines.

Published at around same time, the Sarawak Sketch also documented the changes. As below

Sarawak sketchbook, Illustrations by A. Kasim Abas ; text by Peter Kedit

"The north bank of Kuching in the late 19th Century. Malay villages surrounded by orchards and small gardens nestled under the shelter of the fort. One hundred years later, some of the idyllic village scenes have made way for riverside improvements. The administrative buildings of Sarawak now dominate the skyline. One thing, however, has not changed : the 'sampan' of ferries, still carry much of the cross-river traffic."

The lines marked as red on the map below indicate the most important stretch of the soft edge that contributes to the unique image of the city but it is in danger of being vanished forever. The line marked as purple shown the fast disappearing section of soft edge due to the development of the State Assembly Building. See related post and link of the developments. See pics below for the extent of clearing at the moment:


Dark Force Approaching
Originally uploaded by Jieja



Sarawak Reggata 2008 #03
Originally uploaded by
Roslan Tangah (aka Rasso)



I must stress that the soft edge is an important asset to Kuching and any city and town dotted in Borneo island as well as South East Asia. It truly represents the unique image of this region.

However, the actual condition of the soft edge may not be in line with the picturesque quality seen from the river, it shouldn't be perceived as a bad unwanted place - just a stretch of unused land along the river edge infested with weeds, or in the poor state of maintenance or cleanliness; or even dumping ground for garbage.

There isn't any field study of the soft edge. It is hope that this post will stimulate interest to specialist groups such as ecologists and environmental planners.

In the developed and fast developing cities around the world, most of the waterfront edge along the urban area has been concreted or rebuilt into marina hence destroying the character of the city. The homogeneity of cities is a common mistake Kuching city must avoid. Read related news article 'Cement wall destroying Spain's coast' posted on November 25, 2008







City Precincts


[1] Kuching mosque - Masjid Negeri [Photo 1]
[2] Historic Brooke dockyard [Photo 1] [Photo 2] [Photo 3]
[3] Hawker food centres
[4] Old Ceko markets (closed June 2008 for future development. Heritage at risk)
[5] Indian Street old quarter [Photo 1]
[6] Old Courthouse (1874)
[7] Plaza Merdaka shopping mall development [Website] (to replace heritage items - One row of old shophouses, hundred years old feature tree planting* and 1950s architecture*) *require further information
[8] Padang Merdeka
[9] Chinatown old quarter [Photo 1] [Photo 2]
[10] Kuching Waterfront (built on 1989, former shipyards site)
[11] Sarawak oldest Chinese temple Tua Pek Kong (built 1876)
[12] Kuching's central business district [Photo 1]
[13] Sarawak River [Photo 1]
[14] Villages
[15] Fort Margherita (1879) [Photo 1]
[16] Existing soft edge (threaten by future development)
[17] State Assembly Building (under construction)
[18] Astana (Governor's residence)
[19] Villages
[20] Existing soft edge


See related post- Kuching on Google Map

Kuching at a glance


Kuching Waterfront, Sunset
Originally uploaded by sayap+dewa



Kuching Waterfront
Originally uploaded by MarkLeo



Fort Margherita
Originally uploaded by Journey of A Thousand Miles



Astana
Originally uploaded by Ahock



D2H6685_20060208_1759_33
Originally uploaded by Ahock



Masjid Bahagian Kuching
Originally uploaded by bingregory



Part of Kuching - The triangle
Originally uploaded by framptop



Kuching Post Office
Originally uploaded by spOt_ON



part ii , colonial kuching
Originally uploaded by ★ mewot ★



Sarawak Textile Museum II
Originally uploaded by Tok Wae



Kuching - The Cat City
Originally uploaded by onggon ~ im on holiday



Museum Kuching
Originally uploaded by gLaSS 'n' MeTaL



Kuching
Originally uploaded by Yokels



India Street
Originally uploaded by MarkLeo

Images of Sarawak



See links below to see individual photo uploaded at Flickr:
1. hornbill, 2. Tranquility, 3. Trail to Pa' Lungan, 4. Sarawak Culture, 5. sungai sarawak, 6. Rafflesia Flower, 7. in the rainforest of malaysia, 8. Iban children, 9. IMG_4669 - cropped, 10. Mulu, Borneo


Kuching - tourism perspective #1

Below are some of the phrases taken from "The official Kuching guide 2007" prepared by Wayne Tarman & Mike Reed, sponsored by Sarawak Tourism Board.

"Like all towns and cities in Borneo, the focal point of Kuching, and the reason for its existence, is the river. Hiring a “sampan” to meander slowly up and down the Sarawak River is the best way to get your first impression of Kuching, and a real bargain. It’s good during the day, bliss at sunset and a truly one-off experience at night. From the river you will see picturesque Malay villages (kampungs), a golden-domed mosque, a Victorian fort, a whole street of 19th century Chinese shophouses and an imposing wooden-roofed palace, all set against a background of distant mountains."

"The Waterfront offers excellent views of the Astana, Fort Margherita and the Malay kampungs which line the north bank of the river, but at night-time it really comes alive; it seems like half of Kuching is out meeting friends, watching a show, or just taking the air. "

Obviously, the quality of the city can be summed up as follow:
  • the villages (kampung) line the north bank of the river, opposite the city centre.
  • the river as the primary icon of the city
  • waterway transport - the sampan (small wooden boat)
  • picturesque setting made up from these features - distant mountains, historic buildings, villages, sunset and the river.
So the question I want everyone to ask is the modern development as shown in this post - the oversized State Assembly building, arced pedestrian bridge and wide boulevards to replace the forested water edge, villages and the surrounds of the historic sites appropriate ?

Kuching Waterfront and the old markets

Photos show views from the same location - the eastern end of the Ceko old market overlooking
river edges of the Sarawak River. The southern edge (left of photo) is lined with market's buildings, dockyards. Fishing boats unload catches here at the loading docks (shown on second and third photo below). Sampan (small boat shown on the first photo) bring village residents from the northern side of the river to shop at the old markets everyday. Life like this has been going on for nearly a century.

"The wet markets are strategically sited. Boats bringing in produce can unload their goods at the back, while housewives on a shopping expedition approach the airy hall from the road." Quote from Sarawak sketchbook

Check this link to see the proposed plan to turn this stretch of waterfront into another modern leisure paradise which can be anywhere in the world. In other words, is this development necessary ? in the expense of one unique feature of the city? and also erasing city-working river relationship?

See post Kuching old Ceko Market


Kuching Waterfront 2
At Flickr by SamCotton

Photo by Desmond Ong

Photo by Desmond Ong

'Place of No Return' - the Transformation Ahead



If you are already familiar to Kuching's unique character, you can see this proposed development will drastically transform the opposite original waterfront to a planned city like Canberra or Putra Jaya.

http://sarawakdotcom.blogspot.com/2007/11/dewan-undangan-negeri.html

Sanctuary Hotel and Mall Kuching development



The building going to replace the current Ceko Market and Brooke Dockyard. The extent of adjacent old shops along Gambier Street and Jalan Pasar affected is unknown. I'd say the larger old precinct is threatened. Large part of Kuching's history will be erased.

See post Old Ceko Market (before)
See post Old Ceko Market (after)
See post Kuching waterfront and the old market
See external link Last day of Ceko Market


See link for more detail:
Kucing Berjanggut: Sanctuary Hotel and mall Kuching

Kuching riverfront view from the hotel [2]



Original photo is posted at Flickr. This is one of the most important shot found. It shows the typical view from hotel room facing the Sarawak river (north to north western view) (map and views diagram coming soon). Taken on a sunny day the context are clearly visible. The owner of this photo and also the previous shot had made a comment about her preference of the trees area on the opposite bank (right) remains untouched. In favour to this, the shot has been panned to the left to exclude the new nearly completed - the Assembly Building which can be seen from the previous photo (go to post). This photo represents Kuching's originally character.




Kuching riverfront view from the hotel [1]















Original photo is posted at Flickr. This is one of the most important shot found. It shows the typical view from hotel room facing the Sarawak river (north to north western view) (map and views diagram coming soon). Taken on a sunny day the context are clearly visible. The owner of this photo and also the proceeding shot had made a comment about her preference of the trees area on the opposite bank remains untouched. The current condition shows the new nearly completed building - the Assembly Building is actually changing the quality of the existing aspect forever.

Kuching on Google


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On the northern side of the river there are places named with 'Kampung ...' means village so you can see the urban centre of Kuching city is all concentrated on the southern side of the river.

This is one of the unique features of Kuching and is associated to many of the entries in this blog. Please keep in mind.



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