Hijjas Kasturi

Hijjas bin Kasturi (born 1936) is a Kuala Lumpur-based architect.[1] Active for more than fifty years, he has been responsible for some of the most significant buildings in South East Asia, in the modern, postmodern, and deconstructivist styles. He is considered the father of Malaysian architecture of the second half of the twentieth century.

Early life

Hijjas was born in Singapore in 1936. His Chinese mother was raised in Indonesia and then married a Singaporean Javanese.[2] He and went to Raffles Institute to continue his secondary education, and he was then granted a scholarship by the Australian Government to study at the University of Adelaide; he eventually graduated from the University of Melbourne. He moved to Malaysia in 1967 and founded the first professional degree program in Malaysia, The School of Art and Architecture at MARA Institute of Technology. In 1977, he founded his own practice, Hijjas Kasturi Associates Sdn (HKAS).[3]

Awards

Telekom Tower, by Hijjas Kasturi Associates

Notable buildings

Hijjas was the architect of Wisma Equity one of the most prominent brutalist buildings constructed in Malaysia. Located at 150, Jalan Ampang, 50450, Kuala Lumpur, it is on a prominent site and was completed in 1982. It was officially opened in 1983 by Dato Elyasbin Omar. Wisma Equity is an 11 floors office building including a lower ground. It is made of exposed concrete, and the building appears to defy gravity and structure by becoming larger as it rises. In this regard, it bears a formal similarity to Marcel Breuer’s Whitney Museum in New York City.

Major buildings designed by Hijjas Kasturi Associates include the Menara Maybank (1989), Tabung Haji (1986), Telekom Tower (2001), Putrajaya International Convention Centre (2003) and the 4G11 Tower in Putrajaya (2008).[5][6]

Timeline

1956 - 1959
Draughtsman with Singapore Housing Trust preparing the Master Plan for Queenstown, and lowcost flats for Singapore.
1959 - 1961
Draughtsman with South Australian Housing Trust preparing the Master Plan for Elizabeth Town,South Australia, and various housing schemes.
1961 - 1963
Architectural Assistant with Brown & Davis, South Australia, working on hospital planning, commercialand religious buildings and housing.
1965 - 1965
Architect with Hume Proprietary Ltd., Melbourne, Australia planning the construction of factories, warehouses and district offices.
1966 - 1967
Architect/Planner with Urban Renewal Department of the Singapore Housing and Development Board, in charge of the central transportation terminus study, planning for Ministry of Internal Defence Headquarters and City Development.
1967 - 1969
Team leader for feasibility study for the establishment of InstitutTeknoloji MARA. Founding Head, School of Art and Architecture, Institut Teknologi MARA. Master Planner for ITM Complex at Shah Alam. Architect for MARA Vocational Institute, Malacca.
1969 - 1977
Founding principal partner of AkitekBersekutu, subsequently AkitekBersekutu Malaysia.
1977
Founding principal of Hijjas Kasturi Associates Sdn.,[7] Architects and Planners. The following list covers principal projects (excluding housing) completed since 1977.

Personal life

Hijjas married an Australian woman from Melbourne, Elizabeth Fay Wilson, and the couple had three children who were born in Australia, including daughter Serina Hijjas.[8] Serina Hijjas now serves as director of Hijjas Kasturi Associates Sdn.[9] Hijjas is now married to Angela Jane Longworth, with whom he has two daughters.

References

  1. "Architect Hijjas first in big Aussie contest". The New Straits Times: 5. 24 September 1965.
  2. ""Bukan Melayu betul" - The Nut Graph". thenutgraph.com. Retrieved 16 March 2015.
  3. "Citation Hijjas Bin Kasturi" (PDF). Unimelb.edu.au. Retrieved 2015-06-06.
  4. "Hijjas Bin Kasturi : Architect, Planner and Principal" (PDF). Hijjaskasturi.com. Retrieved 2015-06-06.
  5. "Hijjas Kasturi". Archnet.
  6. "Menara TM". The Skyscraper Center.
  7. "Hijjas Kasturi Associates Sdn". hijjaskasturi.com. Retrieved 16 March 2015.
  8. "Architect Hijjas first in big Aussie contest". The Straits Times: 5. 24 September 1965.
  9. "Archives". thestar.com.my. Retrieved 16 March 2015.
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