Monday, October 3, 2011

EMI Oaklands


This is the EMI India office at Oaklands, Mussoorie. 
Above is the main entry in the warm afternoon sunlight. Below is a meeting table on the centre of the office where most get-togethers take place - morning reflections, brainstorming meetings, chai breaks, A1 drawings... almost everything! The building manager, Ratan, loves plants and so there are a lot of them around the office. It makes the place feels lush and alive. The large map of India on the right hand side is a constant reminder of how vast the Indian subcontinent really is. My desk is the one right at the cyan wall, under the cross. I volunteered during EMI's last season in Mussoorie, and the office since then moved to Delhi in February 2012.





Saturday, October 1, 2011

Mussoorie Mornings



I have just arrived in Mussoorie and am awe-struck.
The view here is so, so beautiful...

Friday, September 30, 2011

Studioing @ Guwahati


I went to Guwahati as a part of an EMI team, to do a survey and master plan for Trinity College and Seminary. It was a hectic packed week; We visited the site, and stayed in town for a whole week to work on the design and made a presentation to the client at the end of the week. Above is the panoramic view of the 3-hectare site, which is located near the Guwahati airport.

Knee deep in cow-dung-ed mud field. This land was formerly a rice paddy field, and it gets inundated with water after the monsoon.

Our surveyor quickly drew up the site's topography, but we didn't have a printer, so we scaled and plotted the survey co-ordinates on grid paper manually by hand.

We had a BIG rainstorm, and thunder struck the power transformer of our building and we were in the dark for a while. Luckily, the mobile internet still works, and we were able to make a video Skype call to the client with the laptop on battery power! Watching the Jonathan on spotlight from the dark makes me feel like am in a radio studio or a drama theatre. This photo made it to the eMI South Asia newsletter, the Indian Thread.

Where's my Assam?

When it comes to black tea, unsugared Assam has always been my favorite hands down. It has a thick robust flavor (malty, they say), that is just perfect for sluggish mornings at work. And so, prior to signing up with EMI and coming to Assam, I've always pictured Assam as a mountainous land of endless tea plantation. But I was ignorant - of course there's more to Assam than teas! In fact, I stayed at the low-lands all the time I was there and did not see any tea plantation during my entire stay at Guwahati, Assam.



Guhawati is the capital of the province of Assam, and it is the largest city in north-eastern part of India. The area sits on a low-altitude wetland plains and has a tropical hot and humid weather. This means, they grow lots of rice! Betel nut palm (above) is also a popular crop in the area. Our visit was at the end of the rainy monsoon period, so there were beautiful seasonal lakes around. The one above was seen along the road, and the guy there is a passing motorcyclist who really should be facing forward!



Our host, Dr. Jacob & Zingi, in our turquoise blue guest apartment.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

"Once there were some aliens named silly..."

We visited the Green School of Bali, and had an eye-opening afternoon of ooh-aahing their cutting-edge bamboo architecture. There has been numerous media coverage on the school and no shortage of information out there, including here, here and here, just to link a few! But I bet you wont find the amazing short story posted below!







Thursday, May 19, 2011

Construction Site in Sanur



Finally I'm out on site! I thought the day that I would emerge out of my air-conned coop would not come. Our company does the landscape design for this project, but I am not involved in it. I tagged along to the site visit because I went to the meeting for another project.













I wonder if I will see that chicken again...

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Taman Ulu



Lush tropical highland garden of Taman Ulu, Tabanan, Bali

A refreshing walk in Bali...





Friday, January 21, 2011

Ann Siang Hill 安详山


This is the view from the window of my office at Ann Siang Hill as the morning sun warms up the yellow walls of the French wine bar across the street. I have been pretty lucky to get a spot near the window on the ground floor. I have enjoyed seeing the occasional sliver of blue sky and the seasonal pouring rains from this spot. There would be passerby, tourists and flocks of touring schoolchildren staring curiously inside (and at my neighbor's collection of vintage batman-superman-ironman toys). There used to be a lot of the pre-wed photo crowd when the road bears the sign of "ONE WAY." Then it disappeared. I don't know why they removed it, because the road is still a one way street. But since then, we haven't seen the sexy bared-back brides and their army of photographers and lighting assistants back.

This charming historical neighborhood has seen significant changes from a few years back when it looked like a street of crumbling old buildings. My colleague who has been working here for the past eighteen years tells a story of how the shops used to be home to lion dance troupes and artists who would hang their laundry of colorful costumes from the shophouse windows. He tells of an old man who used to sit at the rounded corner junction, making lion dance masks out of papier mâché. He hated having his pictures taken by tourists. The old man would angrily chase them off any who did... which of course, upsets some people and led him to be removed from the spot.

After they went, the shophouse was dilapidated for some time until this wine bar moved in. The bar was, and still is very successful with Singapore's expat community. Many similar venues have sprung up around the area, and today, Ann Siang Hill has become a hip, happening, and expensive place to be. In a classic gentrification story - nothing else but high-end boutique shops and drinking clubs is surviving in the area. Recently, an english literature bookshop folded their place there and moved elsewhere due to the high rent. I hope the children's bookshop around the corner stayed... although I'm doubtful. In the mean time, our office has survived there because our boss has a long-standing tenant relationship with the land owner and enjoyed a discounted rent. But after 20 years of renting... isn't it time to buy the place? (well, ok, not now, since the Singapore property prices are booming hot)