Old Admiralty House
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- This article is about a building in Singapore which was known simply as Admiralty House between 1958 and 2002, and is one of several which have gone by that name. See Admiralty House for a list. Also, the Old Admiralty is a building in the Admiralty complex in London, England.
The Old Admiralty House (simplified Chinese: 旧海军部屋; pinyin: Jiù Hǎijūnbù Wū) is a historic building, located at Old Nelson Road within the Sembawang Planning Area in the North Region of Singapore. The building housed the Karimun Admiralty Country Club until January 2007.
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[edit] History
The Old Admiralty House was constructed in 1939, and was used by the British Armed Forces for strategic planning during World War II. It was then named Canberra House, and was also the residence of the Flag Officer of the Malayan Area.
After the Japanese surrendered in 1945, the building was renamed Nelson House and became the residence of the Commodore Superintendent of the Royal Navy Dockyard who, with the help of 200 Japanese prisoners of war, built the estate's first swimming pool.
In 1958, the building was renamed Admiralty House, and became the residence of the British Royal Navy Commander-in-Chief, Far East Station. The building was renamed again to Anzuk House in 1971.
After the British forces left Singapore in 1975, Sembawang Shipyard inherited the building and used it as a recreation club. In 1991, the building was renovated to become Yishun Country Club. The Karimun Admiralty Country Club then took over the building with a change in tenant in 2001.
In 2002, the building became known as Old Admiralty House, and was gazetted as a national monument on 2 December.
In February 2007, the Singapore Land Authority (SLA) put up the Old Admiralty House for public tender — the first time for a national monument — after Karimun Admiralty Country Club vacated the premises in January. Based on guidelines set by SLA, bidders could use the site — leasing at S$34,600 a month — for sports, recreation, beauty and health centres, restaurants or adventure campsites, although SLA would consider other suggestions for approval. However, the new tenants would have to comply to strict preservation guidelines outlined by SLA and the Preservation of Monuments Board to restore and retain the aesthetics of the Old Admiralty House.
On 8 May 2007, SLA announced that the Old Admiralty House was successfully tendered out to YESS Group Pte Ltd. When the tender closed in February, the property attracted keen interest from clubhouse operators and recreational club owners, some in F&B, spa, and lifestyle sectors. YESS Group Pte Ltd was selected for its creative proposal and highest bid at S$40,000, more than S$5,000 above the guide rent.
YESS Group has plans to transform the preserved monument into a multi-purpose club with sports, adventure, leisure and entertainment activities that are family-oriented. It will have adventure camps and clubhouse facilities, golf driving range, swimming pools and theme restaurants. The club will organise adventure activities and school-related CCAs like rock climbing, archery, tennis, rollerblading, golf, fencing lessons. The cost of investment by YESS Group is estimated to be S$5 million.[1]
[edit] Architecture
The Old Admiralty House was built by the British architect Sir Edwin Lutyens, who is known for designing the Cenotaph in London and the planning of the Indian capital New Delhi when it was chosen to replace Calcutta as the seat of the then-British Indian government in 1912.
The two-storey colonial residence was designed in a unique Arts and Crafts architectural style popular in the 19th century.
The house, resembling a traditional English cottage, sits on a lush, open garden and has an interesting internal layout. The design is "asymmetrical" and visitors will have to change directions several times before finding the main rooms. The building is on a 4-hectare site, which includes six other one- and two-storey buildings, a squash court, swimming pool and a golf driving range.
[edit] See also
[edit] Notes
- ^ "Singapore Land Authority’s first preserved monument on tender gets five million touch-up", Singapore Land Authority. Retrieved on 2007-05-08.
[edit] References
- Jessica Cheam, "Want a place with history? Lease Old Admiralty House", The Straits Times, 7 February 2007
- Wan Meng Hao (2005), Know Our Monuments [1], Preservation of Monuments Board