The Prague Post - 'The bottom line': Scuba divers help preserve historic Bangkok mansion

EUR -
AED 4.255748
AFN 76.966793
ALL 96.695643
AMD 442.637818
ANG 2.074344
AOA 1062.63455
ARS 1622.929154
AUD 1.785417
AWG 2.088766
AZN 1.963454
BAM 1.957736
BBD 2.33561
BDT 141.820276
BGN 1.958288
BHD 0.436853
BIF 3423.115385
BMD 1.158816
BND 1.510407
BOB 8.01296
BRL 6.168144
BSD 1.159647
BTN 102.648531
BWP 15.527358
BYN 3.956714
BYR 22712.797504
BZD 2.332207
CAD 1.622748
CDF 2578.365762
CHF 0.92856
CLF 0.027514
CLP 1079.356189
CNY 8.236852
CNH 8.242051
COP 4311.769667
CRC 579.973659
CUC 1.158816
CUP 30.708629
CVE 110.374172
CZK 24.170823
DJF 206.504256
DKK 7.469148
DOP 73.993188
DZD 151.130976
EGP 54.916763
ERN 17.382243
ETB 180.028268
FJD 2.646388
FKP 0.881288
GBP 0.882612
GEL 3.140267
GGP 0.881288
GHS 12.749666
GIP 0.881288
GMD 85.170377
GNF 10071.048304
GTQ 8.880784
GYD 242.611016
HKD 9.023181
HNL 30.515183
HRK 7.533122
HTG 151.901559
HUF 382.461512
IDR 19365.904557
ILS 3.788593
IMP 0.881288
INR 102.601065
IQD 1519.115685
IRR 48800.644836
ISK 146.915093
JEP 0.881288
JMD 186.364335
JOD 0.821626
JPY 180.879504
KES 150.646645
KGS 101.33709
KHR 4641.631149
KMF 493.080213
KPW 1042.954647
KRW 1698.639227
KWD 0.35593
KYD 0.966364
KZT 603.00164
LAK 25163.998593
LBP 103844.113474
LKR 357.02622
LRD 209.307028
LSL 19.945114
LTL 3.421683
LVL 0.700956
LYD 6.323254
MAD 10.727457
MDL 19.678464
MGA 5200.143525
MKD 61.591186
MMK 2432.69899
MNT 4137.73339
MOP 9.300039
MRU 45.989687
MUR 53.212833
MVR 17.846347
MWK 2010.788896
MXN 21.231593
MYR 4.809116
MZN 74.060238
NAD 19.9452
NGN 1680.781931
NIO 42.672576
NOK 11.743171
NPR 164.237449
NZD 2.057429
OMR 0.445566
PAB 1.159652
PEN 3.90226
PGK 4.902892
PHP 68.247902
PKR 327.709241
PLN 4.22815
PYG 8163.074196
QAR 4.226781
RON 5.089518
RSD 117.258309
RUB 93.515683
RWF 1686.06771
SAR 4.346017
SBD 9.529842
SCR 15.738517
SDG 697.029198
SEK 10.995178
SGD 1.510795
SHP 0.869412
SLE 27.145246
SLL 24299.794133
SOS 661.554351
SRD 44.716366
STD 23985.155682
STN 24.524469
SVC 10.147124
SYP 12813.057591
SZL 19.950734
THB 37.563067
TJS 10.703194
TMT 4.067445
TND 3.41758
TOP 2.790151
TRY 49.081633
TTD 7.855838
TWD 36.154486
TZS 2807.225099
UAH 48.792561
UGX 4169.141738
USD 1.158816
UYU 46.145245
UZS 13926.835293
VES 274.110845
VND 30566.094886
VUV 141.562498
WST 3.264333
XAF 656.606457
XAG 0.022189
XAU 0.000281
XCD 3.131759
XCG 2.089985
XDR 0.816608
XOF 656.606457
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.435935
ZAR 19.868951
ZMK 10430.738444
ZMW 26.410123
ZWL 373.138343
  • RBGPF

    -0.1300

    77.09

    -0.17%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1400

    13.96

    -1%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    23.59

    -0.21%

  • GSK

    -0.1600

    47.37

    -0.34%

  • BTI

    0.1500

    54.86

    +0.27%

  • NGG

    -0.4100

    77.53

    -0.53%

  • BCC

    -0.5800

    66.07

    -0.88%

  • AZN

    0.1500

    89.55

    +0.17%

  • RELX

    -0.1100

    40.27

    -0.27%

  • SCS

    0.1500

    15.66

    +0.96%

  • RIO

    -0.7500

    69.74

    -1.08%

  • VOD

    0.0400

    12.25

    +0.33%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    23.02

    -0.09%

  • JRI

    -0.1700

    13.27

    -1.28%

  • BP

    0.1900

    36.69

    +0.52%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    23.87

    +0.04%

'The bottom line': Scuba divers help preserve historic Bangkok mansion
'The bottom line': Scuba divers help preserve historic Bangkok mansion

'The bottom line': Scuba divers help preserve historic Bangkok mansion

A 200-year-old Chinese mansion in Bangkok's heart isn't an obvious place for a scuba school, but in a city relentlessly demolishing its architectural heritage the business is helping preserve the historic home.

Text size:

Dive instructor Poosak Posayachinda's family has owned the traditional teak-walled So Heng Tai for eight generations, but it lives on thanks largely to his decision to convert it into a scuba academy.

The survival of the building, originally built as a home and office for the family business trading birds' nests with China, is a rare success story in a city that harbours little sentiment -- or legal protections -- for historic architectural gems.

"It's because people want to make more money -- that's the bottom line," Bangkok-based American architect Bill Bensley told AFP.

The city's breakneck reinvention over recent years has seen gleaming malls and flashy condos fly up, and buildings like the art deco Scala movie theatre and 1920s British embassy come down.

Thai law only protects properties over 100 years old and there is limited political enthusiasm for safeguarding old architecture at the expense of profitable development.

For families with historic properties, the annual costs of maintenance can be a huge liability, according to historian and archaeologist Phacha Phanomvan.

"We don't have a lottery fund or trust body that comes in to save heritage," she said.

So in 2004 Poosak installed a four-metre-deep pool in the So Heng Tai courtyard, subsequently teaching more than 6,000 students.

The diving school has helped pay the bills on the property's upkeep, which Poosak estimates at up to $25,000 a year, but maintenance is a struggle.

"On a rainy day you find lots of water spots. Sooner or later we will have to do the whole roof again and that's a lot of money," Poosak told AFP.

- Historical theft -

While the culture ministry keeps a national heritage database, Phacha said many properties are not registered and fall through the cracks.

"For individual owners without state assistance... it's better for them to sell the property. Sell the individual building and then sell the (land)," she said.

Adding to the challenge is a growing collectors' market for teak from Thai wooden houses, she said -- some are even dismantled, relocated, and reassembled to become boutique hotels elsewhere.

"You want to keep these properties where they are... You're essentially robbing Bangkok of its (history)," she said.

Photographer Ben Davies spent five years documenting neighbourhoods for his book "Vanishing Bangkok", an experience that left him despondent.

"Something like (30-40 percent) of the buildings and communities I photographed had either disappeared or changed virtually beyond recognition," he told AFP.

And in the rush to develop, Davies says it is unclear how much of Bangkok's heritage will remain in a decade.

"I have a horrible feeling that one day Bangkok will be, outside of its temples and few palaces, (a) unrecognisable but (b) have lost so much of its identity and character so it will look like any other megacity around Asia," he said.

- A glimmer of hope? -

Elsewhere in the region offers Thailand possible solutions, notably Singapore which has won praise since the late 1980s for its heritage protection efforts.

Its strategy examines the entire city-island holistically with conservation going hand-in-hand with planning, says Yeo Kang Shua, an architectural history expert at the Singapore University of Technology and Design.

Underpinning the scheme is the "three R" principles: maximum retention of buildings, sensitive restoration and careful repair.

"In the 1980s a lot of owners deemed it a death sentence for their properties to be given conservation status, but today because of the rarity of such buildings in Singapore, the real estate prices are... enormous," he told AFP.

Despite the challenging environment, there are some signs of change in Bangkok.

In recent years a prominent Sino-Thai business family renovated dilapidated Chinese 1850s warehouses, turning them into the Lhong 1919 "riverside heritage destination".

It now houses a shrine and has become a space for exhibitions, concerts, pop-ups, cafes and food vans -- and there are plans for a wellness resort.

Back at So Heng Thai, Poosak takes his students through their paces.

Channelling the attitude of his ancestors -- who came to Thailand with "one pillow and one mattress" -- he's determined to save his family home.

"If someone comes to give me an offer, the answer is no, simple as that, no matter how much it is," he said.

Q.Fiala--TPP