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Liu Men Hotel
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Liu Men Hotel

Six Peranakan 'doors' restored over three years into Malacca's jewel-box

🇲🇾 Malacca, Malaysia·Est. 1939·Art Deco / Peranakan·$$
71 HHI Distinguished
Heritage Distinguished

Transparency

Why This Score

How each of the nine Heritage Hotel Index dimensions was evaluated.

Heritage & Authenticity

40% of HHI
71.3/100
Historical Significance68.0
15%

Review pending

Architectural Integrity72.0
15%

Review pending

Cultural Immersion75.0
10%

Review pending

Guest Experience

35% of HHI
71.1/100
Authentic Experience72.0
15%

Review pending

Reputation Score72.0
12%

Review pending

Service Quality68.0
8%

Review pending

Operational Excellence

25% of HHI
69.3/100
Conservation Commitment68.0
10%

Review pending

Modern Comforts72.0
8%

Review pending

Value Positioning68.0
7%

Review pending

About the Property

Six heritage shophouses ("liu men" = six doors in Mandarin) painstakingly restored over three years by the Pang family. A blend of 1930s colonial Art Deco geometry with Peranakan cultural motifs, original floor tiles, and curated vintage artifacts.

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Original Purpose

Six Peranakan family shophouses consolidated post-1945

Highlights

Meticulously restored Peranakan mansionAuthentic Baba Nyonya cultural heritageJalan Tokong heritage locationMalacca UNESCO World Heritage ZoneContemporary boutique meets heritage

History Timeline

1826

Malacca enters the Straits Settlements; the city experiences a revival of Peranakan merchant wealth and a new wave of shophouse construction as Chinese families invest in permanent commercial-residential properties.

1900

Six adjacent lots on a Malacca heritage street are acquired by the Pang family, establishing a family compound of connected shophouses that will remain in the family for over a century.

1939

The six shophouses are rebuilt in the Art Deco Peranakan style fashionable in Malacca during the 1930s, combining geometric Art Deco facades with Nyonya ceramic tilework and traditional Chinese courtyard interiors.

1942

Japanese forces occupy Malacca; the Pang family vacates the six shophouses, which are used for Japanese administrative and supply functions until the liberation of Malaya in August 1945.

2008

Malacca UNESCO inscription intensifies heritage tourism; the Pang family commission a three-year conservation study of the six-door shophouse compound with a view to adaptive reuse as a heritage hotel.

2019

Liu Men Hotel opens after three years of painstaking restoration by the Pang family, preserving the Art Deco plasterwork facades, hand-laid Peranakan floor tiles, and the atmospheric six-door compound layout that gives the hotel its name.