Overlooking the verdant Sungei Palas valley, the BOH Tea Centre has, for well over a decade, been a favourite attraction in Cameron Highlands.
Drawing visitors and tea lovers near and far, the acclaimed 145m-by-9m-long building of concrete, steel, glass, and timbre remains to this day a delicately-balanced architecture of unapologetic materiality and considered flourishes.
The Centre’s design has since been revisited, expanded to meet new requirements. Where a legacy vocabulary could have been persistent, there was an opportunity for a trajectory shift.
And seize it, the architects did.
THE CHALLENGE OF SUCCESS
Both the award-winning Phase 1 building and its Phase 2 extension were designed by renowned local practice ZLG.
“It’s a very linear building, based on a simple concept of sustainability, no cut-and-fill, and elevated,” describes Susanne Zeidler, Partner at ZLG, of their original piece.
“It was very site-specific, (we knew) where we wanted to have the views, where we wanted to have the main cafeteria, all connected back to the existing offices.”
The request to enlarge the centre would come 10 years later, finally completing in 2018.
But adding to such a successful and much-lauded icon posed its own concern; the possibility of marring the outlook of the existing building was a real consequence.
“It was a big challenge, you know. Because you build something (like that), so on its own, so present and strong, and now you’re supposed to do an extension. How do you respond?” says Zeidler.
This story is from the Issue 116 edition of d+a.
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This story is from the Issue 116 edition of d+a.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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