
Smokehouse Hotel
A retired British officer's 1937 mock-Tudor slice of English countryside
About the Property
Built in 1937 by a retired British army officer as a slice of the English countryside transplanted to the Malayan highlands, the Smokehouse is a time capsule of colonial eccentricity. Its mock-Tudor beams, stone fireplaces, four-poster beds, and English cottage gardens — complete with hollyhocks and roses at 1,500 meters elevation — recall an era when British planters took afternoon tea overlooking their tea estates. The original cream tea service, served on a garden terrace with scones and clotted cream, has continued uninterrupted since the 1930s.
Original Purpose
English country inn
Highlights
History Timeline
Built by retired British army officer as English-style country inn
Japanese occupation; property used as officers' quarters
Continues operation post-independence as heritage guest house
Renovation preserves mock-Tudor character and English gardens
Original cream tea tradition celebrated as longest-running in Malaysia