Arthur Oakley Coltman

Some time ago on this blog I wrote about Brigadier General Arthur Benison Hubback who designed some of Malaysia’s most famous buildings such as the KL Railway Station and Masjid Jamek.

Another British architect, Arthur Oakley Coltman, also left his mark on Kuala Lumpur. He worked with the architectural firm Booty Edwards & Partners in Malaya from 1925 to 1957, a time which included the Art Deco period and this style is reflected in many of his works.

Here are Coltman’s best known buildings in KL:

  • Clock Tower

Clock Tower Market Square KL

This clock tower is located in the Old Market Square (Medan Pasar Besar) in the heart of KL. It was commissioned to commemorate the coronation of King George VI in 1937 but the memorial plaques were removed following Independence. The sunburst motif on the lower panels is typical of Art Deco design. The clock tower has recently had a much-needed facelift after years of neglect and vandalism but it still looks rather drab and I see it has weeds growing out of the top.  The clock faces, presumably not the originals, are made by Seiko.

  • OCBC Building

OCBC Building Kuala Lumpur

More attractive, in my opinion, is the OCBC building, located on the same square as the Clock Tower and also built in 1937. It was designed with basement parking for bicycles. The set back ground floor provides shade for pedestrians and is an Art Deco version of the five foot way found in traditional shophouses.

  • Oriental Building

Oriental Building KL

This was the tallest building in Kuala Lumpur when it was built in the 1930’s. It housed Radio Malaya and some say the design looks like a 1930’s style radio, similar to this one perhaps.1930's radio

One of the upper four floors was used by the Oriental Government Security Life Assurance Company whose premises were damaged in a minor earthquake in 1936.

  • Anglo-Oriental Building

Anglo Oriental Building KL

This building was also built in 1937 – a busy year for Mr. Coltman. It was the headquarters for Anglo-Oriental, a tin mining company and its main doors were made of pewter. It incorporates a number of art deco features which must have been the height of fashion when it was new.

  • Lee Rubber Building

Lee Rubber Building KL

Also of 1930’s design, the Lee Rubber Building was commissioned by Lee Kong Chian, a Chinese businessman from Johor who made a fortune from rubber and pineapple plantations. During the war the building was used by the notorious Kempeitai military police. Both Coltman and his wife were interned by the Japanese during the War (he in Singapore and she in Sumatra).

  • Rubber Research Institute

RRI Kuala Lumpur

RRI on Jalan Ampang is a series of brick buildings with large concrete or plaster mullions and embellishments in art deco style. The uppermost decorations shown here which look like towels on a rail represent sheets of latex hanging out to dry, an every day sight at the time on any rubber plantation.  A foundation stone laid by the Sultan of Selangor bears the date 22nd April 1936.

  • Odeon Cinema

Odeon Cinema KL

The Odeon Cinema on Jalan Tuanku Abdul Rahman was built in 1936 for the Cathay Organisation. Unfortunately its exterior is now almost entirely blanketed in advertising posters but the towers with flagpoles are just visible flanking the entrance.

  • Sultan Omar Ali Saifuddin Mosque in Brunei
This is the Legoland version.
This is the Legoland version.

Mr. Coltman was active in Brunei too where he completed the detailed drawings for the famous Sultan Omar Ali Saifuddin mosque which was completed in 1958. I have visited this mosque but it was in pre-digital photography days so you’ll have to make do with this shot taken in Legoland Malaysia.

  • Mercantile Bank KL

Mercantile Bank in Kuala Lumpur in 1961

Coltman left Malaya in 1957 but his firm Booty Edwards continued to obtain work including the redevelopment of Mercantile Bank in 1961 (you can see the OCBC Building on the left). The building was remodelled a couple of times since following its rebranding as HSBC and most recently it has found a new life as a hotel, Pacific Express.

Former HSBC/Mercantile Bank in KL

The style of the lower floors is an attempt to blend in with the adjacent heritage shophouses on Medan Pasar Besar and to upgrade the overall appearance and ambience of this historic market square. It works as long as you don’t look up!

10 thoughts on “Arthur Oakley Coltman”

  1. Gorgeous – he was my great uncle…died long before I was born and I haven’t been able to get to Malaysia yet. Thank you for sharing!

  2. He is also my great uncle. thank you for a very interesting article. I will pass it on to my son who intends studying architecture at Wits university South Africa.

  3. Oakley Coltman the architect was a relative of mine My family’s (my maiden name) was Edenborough
    Oakley and his wife Doreen were prisoner of war – in Burma and were forced to work on the roads
    being beaten by the legs. I am very prooud of his architecture and wish I had travelled to see it.
    The other family name was Walbrook

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