Series – Modernist architecture of villas, Kep – Cambodia
Founded in 1908, Kep was the seaside resort for French and later wealthy Cambodians. Called Kep-sur-Mer, the lifestyle in this locality was compared to a Cambodian Riviera with over three hundred villas with ocean views. The architecture is not of French colonial as one might imagine, but in the modernist architecture style of the 50s called New Khmer Architecture
From the 70s, the coup of Lon Nol marked the end of this golden age by the start of civil war. Inert buildings, these villas have been impassive witnesses to the ferocity of the fighting between Cambodians as well as the Vietnamese intervention :
« With the Lon Nol coup Kep became a ghost town, abandoned by holiday makers and sometimes swamped by the war raging in nearby Vietnam. Around 1970 Vietnamese soldiers entered Kep and are said to have eaten all of the animals in the zoo. That was positively civilized behavior compared to the actions of Cambodia’s own revolutionaries a few years later.
The Khmer Rouge took Kep in 1975 and set about destroying its symbols of bourgeois culture, attacking the already abandoned holiday homes of Cambodia’s elite. They also set about destroying any remnants of the bourgeoisie in Kep by herding all the local French speakers to a petrol station and setting it and them on fire.
An overgrown abandoned villa at Kep looks almost like a relic from an ancient Khmer era. When the Vietnamese arrived in 1979 the houses again suffered with locals stripping what was left for building materials to sell to the Vietnamese. The town itself continued to live in fear with the Khmer Rouge shifting just seven kilometers away. »
Fri, 28 September 2001, Bill Bainbridge for the Phnom Penh Post
The abandonment and decay for over 30 years have transformed these villas in blockhouses. The interior burned, blackened facade, only their structures remain like the skeletons of dead bodies on a battlefield. The windows are black holes letting ghosts lurking freely when night falls.
Thanksfully the lush vegetation has reclaimed is right and brings a fragile serenity in everyday life along the coast
Original Text in French
Fondée en 1908, Kep fut le lieu de villégiature des Français puis des riches cambodgiens. Appelé Kep-sur-Mer, le mode de vie dans cette localité fut comparé à une Riviera cambodgienne avec plus de trois cents villas construites. L’architecture n’est pas de type coloniale française comme on pourrait l’imaginer mais dans le style moderniste des années 50 appelé La Nouvelle Architecture Khmer
Dans les années 70, le coup d’état de Lon Nol marqua la fin de cet âge d’or par le début de guerre civile.
Bâtiments inertes, ces villas ont été les témoins impassibles de la férocité des combats autant entre Cambodgiens des deux camps que dans l’intervention vietnamienne.
L’abandon et le délabrement pendant plus de 30 ans ont transformé ces villas en blockhaus. Les intérieurs brulés, la façade noircie, seules leurs structures subsistent, tels les squelettes de cadavres sur un champ de bataille. Ouvertures béantes, les fenêtres sont autant de trous noirs laissant rôder les fantômes librement quand la nuit tombe
Mais la luxuriante végétation a repris ses droits et apporte une fragile sérénité à la vie quotidienne qui revient peu à peu le long de la côte