Cathay Building

The Cathay Building (simplified Chinese: 国泰大厦; traditional Chinese: 國泰大廈; Malay: Bangunan Cathay) was opened in 1939 by Dato Loke Wan Tho as the headquarters for the British Malaya Broadcasting Corporation. Located at 2 Handy Road in the Museum Planning Area of Singapore, the building was most known for its air-conditioned theatre known as the Cathay Cinema, then a technological marvel and the first to be built in Singapore. Cathay Building was the first skyscraper in Singapore and tallest building in Southeast Asia at that time.

Cathay Building
国泰大厦
The Cathay Building in 1945
Former namesCathay Hotel
General information
StatusDemolished
LocationSingapore
Address2 Handy Road, Singapore 229233
CountrySingapore
Coordinates
Named forCathay Cinema
Construction startedJuly 11, 1939 (1939-07-11)
Completed1940
OpenedJuly 1, 1940 (1940-07-01)
Closed2000
Demolished2003
CostS$1 million
OwnerLoke Cheng Kim (former)
Loke Wan Tho (former)
Cathay Organisation
Technical details
Floor count11
Design and construction
ArchitectFrank Wilmin Brewer
Architecture firmArbenz and Brewer
Other information
Number of rooms170
Number of restaurants1
Number of bars1
Website
www.cathay.com.sg
Designated10 February 2003

History

The supposed 16 storey (11 storey upon completion) Cathay Building was designed by British architect Frank W Brewer. The Cathay Building consisted of the Cathay Cinema, a restaurant and the dance hall on the ground floor, as well as a roof garden above the cinema and a residential storey block with a penthouse.

The Cathay Cinema in 1945

The first part of the Cathay Building was opened on 3 October 1939 with the 1,300-seat Cathay Cinema, the dance hall and the Cathay Restaurant. On 1 July 1940, the 11 storey residential block was opened for occupancy, with the owners Mrs Loke Wan and Loke Wan Tho occupied the eleventh floor.[1] The building was the first and tallest skyscraper in Singapore and in Southeast Asia, at a height of 83.5 metres from the Dhoby Ghaut entrance to the top of the building's water tower.[2] Its theatre was the island's first air-conditioned cinema and public building, and where one could sit in an arm chair to watch a film; a rare amenity during that time. The building was also used as a landmark for final landing approach at Singapore's first purpose-built civilian airport, Kallang Airport.

At the beginning of World War II in 1942, the building was converted to a Red Cross casualty station. When Singapore fell to the Japanese, it was used to house the Japanese Broadcasting Department, the Military Propaganda Department, the Military Information Bureau and the broadcast department of the Indian National Army's Provisional government of Free India during the occupation period. The Japanese utilised the building to broadcast propaganda in the Japanese language. It was also the residence of film director Yasujirō Ozu from 1944 till the end of the war.[3]

When the war ended in 1945, it served as the headquarters for Admiral Lord Mountbatten while serving as the Supreme Allied Commander South East Asia Theatre of the South East Asia Command (SEAC). When the SEAC was disbanded a year later, the building was converted back to a cinema and a hotel. The cinema was the first to show American and British films in Singapore. A new air-conditioning plant was installed in the building in 1948. The colonial government vacated the building to be returned to the Cathay Organisation. The Cathay Restaurant was officially reopened on 1 May 1948 under the management of Cathay Restaurant Ltd.[4]

On 9 January 1954, the building reopened as Cathay Hotel with 60 rooms and subsequently expanded to 170 rooms. It had a restaurant, nightclub, swimming pool and shopping arcade.

Cathay Hotel was closed on 30 December 1970, with the 10 floors had been converted into office premises and the top floor occupied by the Cathay Organisation by July 1974.[5]

The building was refaced in 1978 with a new look by STS Leong. The original design was shadowed by the new facade. Cathay Building was the location for the first Orange Julius outlet in Singapore, which opened in 1982. In 1990, Cathay Organisation opened Singapore's first arthouse cinema, The Picturehouse adjacent to Cathay Building. The main Cathay cinema was then converted into a two-hall cineplex during that period.

Redevelopment and preservation

In 1999, Cathay announced the S$100 million plans to redevelop the whole complex. Cathay Building and the Picturehouse would show its last movie in 2000 before closing for redevelopment. The front facade of its theatre building structure was gazetted as a national monument for conservation on 10 February 2003, while the rest of the building structure was later demolished. Thus the new building incorporated conservation of the original art-deco façade of the 1939 and combined together with a modern-day design by Paul Tange of Tange Associates Japan and RDC Architects Pte Ltd Singapore. The Cathay as it is currently known, was opened on 24 March 2006.[6] The building houses retail, food & beverage outlets and an 8-screen Cathay Cineplex which includes The Picturehouse. The Cathay Residences opened towards the end of 2006.

See also

References

  • "Singapore Infopedia: Cathay Building". National Library Board. Archived from the original on 2007-07-04. Retrieved 2007-08-05.
  1. "Singapore's Firs "Skyscraper" In The Making". Retrieved 2018-06-08.
  2. "Singapore's Firs "Skyscraper" In The Making". Retrieved 2018-06-08.
  3. Hasumi, Shiguéhiko (2003). Kantoku Ozu Yasujiro [Director Yasujiro Ozu] (in Japanese) (Enlarged and definitive ed.). Chikuma Shobo. ISBN 4-480-87341-4.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  4. "Liquidate THE CATHAY RESTAURANT OPENS MAY 1". Retrieved 2018-06-08.
  5. Singapore, National Library Board. "Cathay : 55 years of cinema / Lim Kay Tong". eservice.nlb.gov.sg. Retrieved 2018-06-08.
  6. "That golden age..." Retrieved 2018-06-08.
Records
Preceded by
Tallest building in Singapore
70 m (230 ft)
1939–1954
Succeeded by
Asia Insurance Building
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