Friday, March 31, 2017

INTERNET LAN CABLES INTEGRATED WITH ELECTRICAL WIRING CONDUITS

In order for us to have an integrated wireless and Internet access in the future, we embedded our LAN cables with our electric wiring conduits.

Both ground floor and first floor premises were wired up.

Digital routers will be installed when all electrics are done.

Webcam cameras will also be installed around the building so as to allow us to monitor the property remotely. They will enhance our security of the premises.

LAN cables being installed

Upstairs electric wiring and LAN cables upstairs


Thursday, March 30, 2017

SEET KEE ANN - THE PERSON WHO DONATED HIS LAND TO BUILD KEE ANN ROAD

Seet Kee Ann was the person who donated his land to construct Kee Ann Road.

Due to his contribution and generocity to the Malacca community then,  the road was named after him in his honour.


This portrait of him was displayed at Ole Sayang Nyonya  Restaurant in Melaka Raya which is opened by the Seet family who are his decendents.

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

NEW PLUMBING AND REWIRING WORKS

Besides doing our new roofing upgrading, we also changed our water piping and electrical rewiring.


The old water piping is blocked over the years and the pipe has rusted. It was about time to improve the piping with newer poly pipe.

Electrical wiring which used to be external wiring is now changed to wiring in conduits. The old external wiring is retained for record. New distributor boards are also changed instead of using the old fuse protection system.



Sunday, March 26, 2017

ROOFING BEING CHANGED AS PART OF RENOVATION

27.3.2017
Polycarbonate sheets fixed on main airwell tin Cheong.

New on left and old on right

We can manually open the tin Cheong by pulling the rope for better ventilation if needed

Our rear roofing is being upgraded.

More importantly, our front Heritage roof is retained.





Installing insulated aluminium roofing that cuts out heat from the roof top and sound from rain.

By using these new roofing, we hope our car park and upstairs kitchen area will be cooler and less noisy from rainfall.


Saturday, March 25, 2017

BOOKING FOR DURIAN PARTY AT CAR PARK IN JULY 2017

An advanced booking for a durian party at our car park has been received. This function will be held on Saturday, 29th. July 2017.

Some former Malacca High School pupils who are celebrating their 60 years will be gathering for a reunion at Ramada Hotel at night.

A schoolmate is organising a durian party during the day and the venue will be at our new car park area.

It will be interesting for us to host our guests in this very unique Malaysian celebration.

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

SECURITY WEBCAM INSTALLED AT REAR DOOR

24.3.17

A webcam has been installed at the rear entrance today.



We are going to install a security webcam at our rear door. It is to monitor traffic, view and record suspicious characters at our backlane.





Webcam

Since it is Internet based, we can view live feed via the Internet remotely.


Monday, March 20, 2017

IN-HOUSE LIGHT & SOUND SHOWS PLANNED IN THE FUTURE

During our renovation of our premises, we found that our premises has the facilities to provide our own in-house light and sound shows for our in-house guests and visitors to our premises at night.


The shows can be about Malacca history from her founding to her rise in the 15th. Century.

Or even on the background and history of our heritage house that spans 90 years.

Melaka River at night


Other shows can highlight the historical sites around Melaka.

Cultural information can also be produced.

This idea opens up a host of interesting projects which we can promote Kee Ann Road in particular and Melaka in general.




We need to get our creative juices going so that we can make our dream becomes a reality.

Watch our postings in our future.

Creative Team @homestayatkeeannroad.blogspot.my


Wednesday, March 15, 2017

INSTALLING REAR STAIRS TO AV ROOM & 1ST. FLOOR

16.3.17
Completed new stairs frame.


15.3.17
Renovation works have moved to installing new staircase at the rear car park area.


Wooden steps and a piece of plywood will be placed on the platform.

Friday, March 10, 2017

INSTALLING REAR ROLLER SHUTTER DOOR

13.3.2017

Completed automatic roller shutter door and levelling of interior car park floor.


Completed roller door.

Today, we started to install our new rear automatic roller shutter.

It is 8.5ft. high by 13.5 ft in width.

2 cars can easily park inside the new car park area or a mini tour van.

Installing the roller Shutter door.

Nearly completed roller Shutter door and emergency side door.


OUR 1ST BATCH HOMESTAY IN 2016 IS FROM PAKISTAN BEFORE RENOVATION

We hosted a batch of guests from Pakistan in 2016 in our home stay in Malacca.


They stayed in our rooms upstairs and cooked their meals.

They stayed about a week there.

Wednesday, March 8, 2017

WHY STAY AT KEE ANN ROAD?

LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION

  • Centrally located within Malacca New Chinatown.
  • Experience a private HOMESTAY in a heritage building of more than 100 years.
  • A historical Street in Malacca since 1910s. At least 100 years old.
  • All within walking distance.
  • 5 minutes walk to The Shore.
  • 3 minutes walk to Vedro by the River.
  • 4 minutes walk to Melaka River Walk.
  • 10 minutes walk to Jonker's walk.
  • 20 minutes walk to Stadthuys historical square.

Tuesday, March 7, 2017

PROPOSED MALACCA WATER TAXIS

Monday, 6 March 2017

Malacca gets its strides right

I REFER to the report “Malacca to introduce water taxis to reduce traffic jam” (The Star, March 3) and wish to congratulate the state government for its foresight and proactive measures.

 
It was just over a year ago that Chief Minister Datuk Seri Idris Haron launched a smartphone application known as Destinasi Melaka, developed by Telekom Malaysia and the Malacca Tourism Promotion Division.
The phone app is accessible from anywhere around the globe, providing interesting and relevant information about Malacca in an organised manner, allowing visitors to make bookings in advance and upon arrival. One can also use it for navigation, making foldable maps unnecessary and can share their Malacca experience with just a few clicks of the button.
Many other destinations are still printing costly brochures which are left to gather dust. The few that are picked up are swiftly discarded as it is much easier to share pictures and videos using smartphones.
image: http://bcp.crwdcntrl.net/5/c=5593/b=38486246
Malacca is so popular with tourists that it is jam-packed on weekends but visitors are not deterred, as the delights it has to offer are worth the trouble.
But the state government is not resting on its laurels and is making use of the Malacca river (pic), which flows through the middle of the city, for public transport.
It plans to introduce water taxis in the middle of this year, upon completion of the RM130 million project to rehabilitate and beautify the river project.
These passenger boats will ply between the CIQ complex at the estuary to the Melaka Sentral bus terminal, with five new jetties in between.
There is no doubt cruising along the Malacca River will be a great experience.
While state governments should build infrastructure such as jetties, they should not get involved with water transport.
It is best to appoint a concessionaire to run such services in a sustainable manner without bleeding the coffers of the state. Safety should be paramount and there is no need to decorate the boats with a Malacca roof.
As such, water taxis to be introduced in Malacca should be the safest available, allowing thousands of commuters and tourists to use them without any incident, with the pilots, ushers and security personnel trained to handle any emergencies.
CY MING
Ampang

Read more at http://www.thestar.com.my/opinion/letters/2017/03/06/malacca-gets-its-strides-right/#8JDRQMIHBpux6TB6.99

REFURBISHMENT HAS BEGUN


The rear being refurbished to cater for private car parking for 2 cars.

Visitors can park their cars here and go up to our HOMESTAY apartments.

Sunday, March 5, 2017

KEE ANN ROAD IS WAKING UP FROM 30 YEARS OF SLUMBER

Things are happening in Kee Ann road area. 

MALACCA WATER TAXIS TO PLY MELAKA RIVER

By mid 2017, a new Malacca water taxi service will be launched by mid year.

Melaka Water Taxi



This service will have 5 taxi terminals from Melaka Sentral bus hub to CIQ terminal at the estuary of Malacca River



Passengers can take these water taxis into the city which bypasses traffic jams in the city.


HISTORICAL PAST OF KEE ANN ROAD

Friday, 13 March 2015

In honour of Malacca’s illustrious son

Persona gratissima: Seet Kee Ann (seated second from left) was a member of the Malacca Municipal Commission from 1895.
Persona gratissima: Seet Kee Ann (seated second from left) was a member of the Malacca Municipal Commission from 1895.
FOR six decades from 1930, Jalan Kee Ann was the liveliest place in Malacca.

The central wet market at the junction of the street near the main bus station and taxi terminal made it a busy area throughout the day.
It was bustling even after sun down, thanks to a popular theatre situated along the road and a thriving night market that stretched all the way to nearby Kampung Jawa.

The central market has since moved twice, first to Jalan Kilang in 1991 and then to its current location in Jalan Sentral in Peringgit in 2004.
Jalan Kee Ann, however, hasn’t quite lost its lustre yet.
But Vedro Melaka, a massive seven-storey commercial development project being built in its midst, might finally eclipse the road’s old-world attractions.
Not many people are aware that the street is named after one of Malacca’s most illustrious sons and a grand old man of his era.
Seet Kee Ann, whose surname was also spelled as Sit or See, was regarded as a “persona gratissima” (a highly favoured person) by the British colonial administrators.
As a Kapitan China of Malacca and oldest Justice of Peace in the Straits Settlement, Kee Ann devoted many years of his life to community service.
Among the many posts which he held were head of Hokkien Huay Kuan (Hokkien Association), trustee of the Cheng Hoon Teng temple — the oldest Chinese temple in the country — as well as member of the Chinese Advisory Board and council member of licensing justices.
The road was named in his honour because the philanthropist donated much of the land surrounding it to the Malacca Municipal Commission, of which he served as a councillor since 1895.
Kee Ann was born in Malacca in 1862. His father, Seet Moh Guan, was a merchant and community leader while his grandfather Seet Hood Kee was a significant Chinese leader during Dutch colonial rule.
At the age of 30, Kee Ann ventured into planting tapioca, pepper and gambier (gambir in Malay). Gambier, also known as catechu, is a common ingredient used by chewers of betel leaves.

Bustling spot: This 1960s photo shows just how busy Jalan Kee Ann was during its heyday.
Bustling spot: This 1960s photo shows just how busy Jalan Kee Ann was during its heyday.
In the early 1800s, the use of gambier was extended to the dyeing and tanning industries in Britain, causing prices to rise and more plantations to sprout in the peninsula.
By 1897, Kee Ann had become even wealthier as a partner and manager of an opium farm. The growing of poppies and production of opium was then a legal business licensed by the British.
He lived with his wife, two sons, five daughters and many grandchildren at 77, Heeren Street.
Bustling road: Jalan Kee Ann is a busy street with many old shops.
Bustling road: Jalan Kee Ann is a busy street with many old shops.
His residence was three elongated houses merged into one and had an outstanding frontage.
When he died of septicaemia on Jan 17, 1924 there was a sense of profound loss in town.
British colonial officers were among the thousands who took part in the funeral procession to Bukit Baru, where his remains were buried.
His second son Seet Wee Yan and his family occupied No 77, Heeren Street until 1960 when it was sold to rubber plantation tycoon Lau Kiong Mo.
Well-known eatery: The popular Rojak Ali Lido of Jalan Kee Ann, has moved across the road and is now located next to the iconic Lam Sing Coffee building.
Well-known eatery: The popular Rojak Ali Lido of Jalan Kee Ann, has moved across the road and is now located next to the iconic Lam Sing Coffee building.
At one stage, there were 42 families living as tenants of the house. Two decades later, Gwee Wei Kiat, a businessman and collector of antique Chinese ceramics, bought over the place and lived there.
For unknown reasons, the house was abandoned during the 1990s. It was a derelict building and a far cry from its former glory when it was taken over by Chen Joon Pin, who turned it into the Jonker Bird House, an exhibition centre for the swiftlet farming industry.
The building was reportedly restored at a cost of about RM5mil and touted as an example of how the industry could help in conserving old buildings in 2011.
But many conservationists did not think so. Malaysian Heritage Trust president Tun Ahmad Sarji Abdul Hamid for example, wondered how, by any stretch of imagination, anyone could say that it was a good fit for a building, which was once the ancestral home of a prominent community leader.

Destroyed by fire: The ruins of the once renowned Lido theatre which started out as the El Dorado, where Bangsawan and English plays were staged.
Destroyed by fire: The ruins of the once renowned Lido theatre which started out as the El Dorado, where Bangsawan and English plays were staged.
The famous bird house which used to draw tourists has since been closed.
During the 1920s, one of the main attractions of Kee Ann road was the El Dorado Theatre, which eventually turned into the Lido Cinema and later converted into two supermarkets before being destroyed by a fire three years ago.
The El Dorado was originally a Bangsawan theatre where English, Malay and Javanese plays were staged, in addition to silent movies of that period.
It was where Malaccans watched recorded English football matches, including the FA Cup Final between Bolton Wanderers and West Ham United played at Wembley Stadium in 1923.
An added bonus to the show was the wedding of Prince Albert, Duke of York (who later became King George VI), and Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon (later Queen Elizabeth or the Queen Mother), which took place on April 26, 1923.
Shaw Brothers bought over the Lido Cinema in the 1940s and it was a favourite place for diehard moviegoers with the lowest ticket prices at 65sen.
I liked the Lido because in addition to the stalls selling an assortment of snacks outside, it also housed the famous P. Mangudi’s shop where one could buy comics such as Beano and Dandy.
During the 1990s when cinemas were regarded as passé, the Lido was converted into the Lai Lai emporium and later turned into the Khelass supermarket.
A fire razed it to the ground in 2012, leaving it in ruins. A row of fruit and food stalls outside were also destroyed but have been reopened.
The popular mamak joint, Restoran Ilmali, better known as Rojak Ali Lido, has now moved to better premises across the road, next to the 65-year-old Lam Sing Coffee Manufacturers shop.
Lam Sing Coffee known locally as “Chap Murid” or “Pupil Brand” coffee was created by Kang Chan Yoke, who came to Malacca from Xiamen, China in 1936. At the junction, there are several popular stalls selling an assortment of hawker food. The “kolo mee” stall at the corner is a favourite of my better half.
The famous “Bedah Kampung Jawa” goreng pisang (banana fritters) stall is popular with both locals and tourists.
At the other end of the road where Jalan Kee Ann branches out from Jalan Bunga Raya, there are still hawker stalls and shops dating back more than five decades.
Among them is the Heng Kee stall selling herbal concoctions, including medicinal tea, juice of wild sugarcane (Saccharum spontaneum) or tebu lanjung and extract of pegaga, also known as jin chian cao in Chinese and vellarai in Tamil.
The stall, set up by a pioneer in the business, Low Chew Geng, 50 years ago, is now run by his daughter Low Siew Hoon, 57.
About 10m across the street is another equally popular stall selling lo han ko (Siraitia grosvenorii) and other herbal drinks.
Jalan Kee Ann is also famous for old shops selling items related to sewing and handicraft. A few of the original older tailor shops are still around, including the Kedai Jahit Miya started by Mok Leng Chek, 75 years ago.
Today, her daughter-in-law Chang Yoke Lai, 42, runs the shop and creates popular traditional dresses including the kebaya and baju kurung.

Read more at http://www.thestar.com.my/metro/views/2015/03/13/in-honour-of-malaccas-illustrious-son-jalan-kee-anns-oldworld-attractions-set-to-be-eclipsed-by-seve/#THpRL28UcawXHm8l.99

Thursday, March 2, 2017

HOMESTAY@KEEANNROAD COMING SOON

Renovation and refurbishment is to begin this month at Kee Ann Road, Malacca.

2 rooms apartments with living rooms and washrooms are planned on the first floor.

There is one furnished apartment at the rear with another apartment in the front. All rooms will be air conditioned.

Long stay at our apartment can be negotiated.

Front room



The rear apartment has 2 bedrooms and an audio room above the car park area. All these rooms are also air conditioned for your comfort stay.

A WC and electric powered water heater shower are provided including a kitchenette and dining area.

A car park for 2 cars is provided to our guests at the rear of our home stay. An automatic roller shutter door with an emergency door is installed.

MALACCA STILL NEEDS 8,000 ROOMS

In the hospitality segment, Malacca is still lacking some 8,000 hotel rooms, and our projects such as Harbour City are also poised to plug that gap."
With Vedro by the River mall located at end of Kee Ann Road by June 2017, more visitors will visit Kee Ann Road and Bunga Raya.


Vedro by the River

We are going to refurbish 12, Kee Ann next month so that visitors can stay in our home stay apartments soon.

Watch this space for our latest development news.