Showing posts with label Serge Corrieras. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Serge Corrieras. Show all posts

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Wat Sarawan

Said to be one of the five original pagodas in Phnom Penh, in common with the other ones there are few original buildings in the compound. The nearby Wat Ounalom was supposedly inaugurated in 1443, but there appear to be few if any buildings that are more than a century old, and most are far more modern. Wat Sarawan is remarkable in that it contains what are arguably the most ancient Buddhist scrolls in the country. Written on parchment, these religious texts tend to decay in the tropical climate and a great many were destroyed or lost during the tumultuous years of the past few decades.
One striking structure that remains on the site is a red brick tower that appears to be particularly ancient. The Serge Corrieras photograph of children playing in front of it in 1991 shows it looking on the verge of collapse. What is even more surprising is that in 2012 this building which was obviously refurbished in the subsequent years looks even older now. The colonial-style slatted windows are falling apart. As far as I know it is only about one hundred years old but one would be easily fooled into thinking it is much more ancient.





Thursday, December 20, 2012

Wat Sarawan Building





I posted the top two pictures previously, mistakenly believing they were taken at Wat Ounalom. There is a very similar building in the grounds of that pagoda, but this morning I found the right one in the grounds of nearby Wat Sarawan. The top picture by Serge Corrieras was taken in 1991. The second by Chris Watson is from 2007. The bottom two are how it appears today.


Friday, June 22, 2012

Broken Bricks

This series of shots shows the same building on the corner of St 130 and St 5 as it has changed over the years. The first shot is by the esteemed Serge Corrieras from around 1992. The next shows it in what I'd guess as around 2006. Then we see it transformed into the notorious "Broken Bricks" bar, an ongoing work of art until its demise in 2008. The following shots show it a few months later while it was being refurbished. They did an excellent job renovating this old building. The final shot shows it today in 2012, with foliage blooming outside.