Lunuganga

Country Home/Hotel in Bentota, Sri Lanka
6°24′12″N 80°1′18″E / 6.40333°N 80.02167°E / 6.40333; 80.02167Year(s) built1948 -1998OwnerGeoffrey Bawa TrustTechnical detailsSize25 AcresDesign and constructionArchitect(s)Geoffrey BawaOther informationNumber of rooms7Number of restaurants1Websitegeoffreybawa.com/lunuganga

The Lunuganga Estate is the former country house of renowned Sri Lankan architect Geoffrey Bawa.[1][2]

History

Cinnamon Hill, Bawa's final resting place

The estate had been used as a cinnamon estate during the Dutch era and then a rubber plantation under the British. In 1948, the small house in the estate was given on rent to the local tax collector. In 1949, newly qualified lawyer Geoffrey Bawa bought it from its owner, intending to convert the estate bungalow into a weekend house and create a tropical version of a European renaissance garden. The 25 acres (10 ha)[3] property is located on the banks of the Dedduwa Lake in Bentota. Bawa named the estate Lunuganga, which in Sinhala means Salt River. Recognising his lack of architectural knowledge, Bawa returned to England to study architecture. After qualifying as an architect, he returned to Ceylon in 1958 and joined the architectural practice of Edwards, Reid and Beggs.

Bawa continued to develop the house and gardens at Lunuganga for forty years until his death in May 2003. He was cremated on the Cinnamon Hill and his ashes were buried there.

The house and gardens contain many works from artists such as Donald Friend and Laki Senanayake as well as artifacts from Asia and Europe.[4]

Current Day

A view overlooking the Butterfly Pond on the estate

Since Bawa's death in 2003, Lunuganga has been managed by a group of his close friends, who form the Lunuganga Trust. The gardens are now open to the public and the buildings on the estate are run as a seasonal country house hotel by Teardrop Hotels.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Work of Geoffrey Bawa". Geoffrey Bawa Trust. Archived from the original on 16 August 2016. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  2. ^ Robson, David (19 December 2013). "Remembering Bawa". ArchDaily. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  3. ^ "Lunuganga". geoffreybawa. Retrieved 2024-09-02.
  4. ^ Prins, R. Stephen (14 December 2008). "The Bawas' green mansions". Sunday Times. Retrieved 22 September 2016.