urban houses. The Traditional Chinese shophouses
are deep-plan brick row houses that are located in
relatively dense urban areas. In Malaysia, the origin
of the Straits Chinese Shophouse can be traced back
to the influx of Chinese immigrants from densely
populated southern coastal provinces of China in the
19th century until World War II (Chen, 1998). By the
early 20th century, this urban design had spread to
every major town in Malaysia. The Straits Chinese
Shophouse in Malaysia have traditionally been two-
storey buildings with the lower floor used for trading
and the upper floor used for residential purposes.
While in Penang, a shophouses can be a purely
residential structure which elsewhere would be called
as a terrace house. One of the most important features
of Straits Chinese Shophouse is that each building has
one or more internal courtyards (Chen, 1998).
Moreover, Courtyard houses can be found not only in
China and Southeast Asia but also in many other parts
of the world (Edwards, Sibley, Land, and Hakmi,
2006). It is considered that the courtyards provide not
only natural lighting and ventilation but also offer
protection from harsh outdoor conditions (Safarzadeh
and Bahadori, 2005). In China, courtyard houses were
originally found in residences throughout the country,
but their composition and scale varied depending on
their location (Knapp, 1999). In general, the
proportion of courtyard space to structural space
diminishes significantly from Northeast to Southeast
China to restrict the infiltration of direct solar
radiation and facilitate ventilation (Knapp, 1999).
Most of the courtyards in Malaysian Straits Chinese
Shophouse are the narrow and deep courtyards that
originated from the southern part of China. However,
George Town, the capital city of the Malaysian state
of Penang, is located at the north-eastern tip of
Penang Island. It is Malaysia's second largest city; the
historical core of George Town has a tremendous
architectural history with approximately 7,000 units
of traditional courtyard shophouse in George Town
Heritage City. This city was built 200 years ago
during different periods (Tan, 2015).
3 ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS
NATURAL VENTILATION AND
NATURAL LIGHTING
The concept of traditional courtyards (Air_Wells)
designed to cope with the local tropical climate, the
buildings are structured to maximize airflow (Stubbs
& Thomson, 2016). Courtyards as the main open
space of many dwellings, constituted important
features in residential architecture throughout
antiquity in Heritage City George Town. The
traditional courtyard shophouses were designed with
rooms of various functions surrounding the
courtyards and were organised in association with
these yards as the life of the occupants evolved
around them. The important role played by the
courtyard was due to climatic conditions as well as to
the of the social parameters area that offered
occupants a protected area suitable for outdoor
activities throughout the year. Thus, the courtyard
always held a special, functional, environmental
aspects role within a residence. Reynolds (2002)
described that the courtyards as special places that are
outside yet almost inside, open to sky, usually in
contact with the earth, but surrounded by rooms.
Edwards, Sibley, Land, and Hakmi (2006) stated that
the natural elements of the courtyard i.e. earth
beneath and sky above, ensure its direct contact with
nature. This study presents an overall view of all the
different ventilation and lighting elements related to
the courtyards of traditional architecture found in
shohouses underlining their environmental
significance.
4 THE SHOPHOUSE
COURTYARD CENTRAL
Shophouses courtyard were originally designed to be
fully open to the sky in order is similar to the internal
courtyards in Southern Chinese architecture. Hence,
the concept adapted the local conditions, as the house
is long and narrow (Kubota, Zakaria, Abe, and Toe,
2017). Courtyard provides better cross ventilation and
natural daylight as presented at Figure 2. The
placement of courtyards in the shophouse ensures the
present of natural daylight throughout the house.
With the aid of operable louvered windows in the
courtyard (Air_Well), the rooms in the house have
ample air flow while having the control of daylight
entering the rooms (Tan, 2015). Other passive ways
of ventilation is through the air vents on the façade
and the partitions.
Figure 2: Analysis the Natural Ventilation and Natural
Lightning of Shophouse
Source: Adapted and Surveyed by Author
Investigating the Environmental Aspects of Courtyard in "Late Straits" Eclectic Style Shophouses, George Town, Malaysia
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