Echoes of Gambir Street: The Fading Charm of Battery Street

Continue from Bishopgate..

battery_street

After capturing enough photos at Bishopgate, my cousin and I made our way toward India Street. Along the way, he mentioned he wanted to revisit Battery Street. Common sense suggested the name was literal, I fully expected a street lined with shops selling automotive or household batteries. Wouldn't you?

As it turns out, we were both right and wrong. My cousin, drawing on his experience as a former tour guide, explained that this was actually the very first street in Kuching to be lit by electricity. 

While the connection between "Battery" and "lighting" seemed a bit thin at first, it started to make sense once I considered the history of early power generation. Interestingly, when I tried to verify this online, I found almost no records of a "Battery Street" in Kuching. 

However, given my cousin’s expertise, I’m inclined to believe his account of this hidden history. 😋


lamppost


What struck me most wasn't just the history, but the architecture. Several buildings still retain their original British colonial charm, and the vintage lampposts are remarkably still in use today. Geographically, the lane acts as a natural wind tunnel; because it opens onto a main road at one end, a refreshing breeze constantly flows through the narrow passage.

Tucked just behind the current police station, this quiet lane houses no more than twenty shoplots. It is a diverse little ecosystem of businesses: tailor shops, cozy cafés, trading companies, fashion houses, a goldsmith, and even a law firm.









However, with new developments rising quickly just behind the lane, I feel a sense of foreboding. I doubt the government will move to preserve these aging structures. It feels like only a matter of time before they are torn down to make way for the "new." I intend to take as many photos as possible now, capturing the soul of the street before it meets the same fate as the old Gambir Street.

4 Comments

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cooknengr said…
Hey kid, I believe Battery street is also called 棺材巷, back in my days, there were a few 棺材 shop in this area. What you thought was 涼風吹來 was actually 陰風陣陣.

I like you Youtube clip, really miss the 古晉人的華語, don't forget to add a few " Ngai Tee" in the future.
Wilson Chin said…
Taiko, I know that somewhere near the Bishopgate there are also few shop sells coffin back in the old days.
:S

thanks, I'll post more in the future.
Anonymous said…
hi, just come across your blog and actually that lane is known as Kai Joo Lane instead of Battery Lane .. and previously also known as Coffin Lane coz there are a few shops that sells coffin but now it has turn into coffee shops, tailors and commercial and the famous sio bau too ..
Wilson Chin said…
Hi Anonymous,

Thank you for the valuable information, cause I remember before I wrote this post, I've tried search for relevant information all over the web, however it returns with 0 results.

oh, I'm planning to go back to try the sio bau.

Are you from Kuching?