Last edited 28 Nov 2021

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Institute of Historic Building Conservation Institute / association Website

Restoring Singapore shophouses

This article originally appeared in Context 145, published by The Institute of Historic Building Conservation in July 2016. It was written by Brian Morton MBE.

Singapore shophouses of the 1920s.jpg

[Image: Singapore shophouses of the 1920s]

Structural engineer Brian Morton advised the Singapore Government on a new approach to restoring Singapore’s shophouses, which has since been incorporated into the regulations.


In Singapore in the early 1990s shophouses were being demolished based on misleading structural advice that they were too expensive, or too difficult to restore for any future use. The cleared sites were of great value for the modern multi-storey development.

When Sir Stamford Raffles (1781–1826) arrived, Singapore was hardly developed at all. Raffles formulated a plan to divide the town into communal neighbourhoods, or campongs. The Chinese were moved to south of the Singapore River, and local groups and other Malays to the upper reaches of the river. The north banks of the Singapore River were set aside for development by the government.

Most of the first workershouses, low-rise timber buildings, were replaced by the blocks of shophouses designed with set requirements relating to site size, building heights and overall layouts of these areas, such as China Town and Little India.

Prior to my involvement in 1993, and indeed during the time I was in Singapore, shophouses were being demolished at a significant rate. The government sought advice on how to save the buildings that were thought to be at the end of their life.

The reason that so many houses had been demolished related to an approach that was generally used by the builders. If the roofs were in a bad condition, the timbers were replaced, and if the floors were in bad condition, they too were replaced. Temporary supports were used to retain the party walls if necessary. The result of this was that houses collapsed.

Later a top-down philosophy was introduced, where individual roof timbers were inspected and replaced as necessary. Similar action was taken at each floor level, rebuilding masonry from the top down as the roof and floors were dealt with. This resulted in a very stable structure being retained.

The Singapore Government appointed a French architect and me to guide it with this new approach, and agreeing a way forward with the officers of the government and its engineers. This led to a proposal that a group of houses in China Town, and another group in Little India, should be restored in accordance with this approach. The new philosophy and methodology has since been incorporated into the control regulations for work to these historic structures.

Singapore shophouses being refurbished.jpg

[Image: Singapore shophouses being refurbished]

Brian Morton MBE is consultant to the Morton Partnership.


Further reading

--Institute of Historic Building Conservation

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