
Courtesy of ‘The Wires’ (The FCC Cambodia's Newsletter)
After years of interest, the FCC recently made a deal on the old mansion across from the
It's one of
"We've been interested in the building for about 15 years, since we came here in the early 1990s," says Anthony Alderson, FCC operations director. "We plan to renovate it in 1920s style." Alderson says a new FCC-affiliated company called Museum View is now conducting surveys and soil tests on the site, and it will soon open bidding to architects for design proposals. If all goes well, building will begin in mid-2008. The plans are welcome news for architects and preservationists who have long clamored for the building to be saved from neglect and disrepair. Dougald O'Reilly, former director of Heritage Watch, says the building is a signature
With the massive boom in property value, preservationists like O'Reilly have become increasingly concerned about the disrepair - and disappearance - of many colonial era buildings. Although the exact history of 32 Sothearos has been obscured by war and civil strife, the house was probably built in the 1920s, says Helen Grant Ross, an expert on Cambodian architecture. The National Archives have no record of the building's original owner or use. "It's definitely a landmark. Just about everyone refers to it as 'that run-down colonial building opposite the
Even in its current decayed state, the building is stunning. Still, renovators have a Herculean task ahead. Inside, gaping holes riddle the ceiling in many areas, exposing the old wooden rafters. The fading blue walls are pocked and covered with graffiti - drawings, English lessons, names and dates - from previous bodyguards and Royal Gendarmerie who were once lodged at the site. The decorative tiles on the floor are loose and cracked in several places. A grand staircase, blocked by a pile of broken shutters, sweeps up to the second floor where characteristic Cambodian tile swathes the floor in an expansive orange-and-white checkerboard. "It is one of the structures most photographed by visitors to
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