The Sarawak Club was first set up in 1876 as a private membership club. It is reputedly the oldest private membership club of its kind in Malaysia and the first golf club in East Malaysia. Since the closure of The Sarawak Club's Golf Course in 1987 following expiry of the land lease, the Management Committee was able to transform the Club from golf club to that of a sports and city club with the building of all new sporting, dining and recreational facilities.

Aerial View of the Sarawak Club

 Entrance Road to Sarawak Club

 Side View of Sarawak Club

Entrance Porch to Sarawak Club

The Sarawak Club is situated atop one of the highest points in the heart of Kuching City along Jalan Taman Budaya (formerly known as Golf Links Road). It is situated right next to the Reservoir Park and the Museum Garden – public facilities that form part of the green lung of the city. This site has been the home of the Sarawak Club since 1927.

The Sarawak Club was established in 1876 and is reputedly one of the oldest private membership clubs in the whole of Malaysia. It was set up to cater for the entertainment and recreational needs of the officers of the white Rajahs that ruled the state from 1841 to 1941.

Until the 1950's The Sarawak Club was an exclusive domain of officers of the Brooke Regime and subsequently the British colonial masters. Today, The Sarawak Club has a membership of some 3,000 members which come from a cross section of Kuching City's business, professional and civil service community.

The Sarawak Club represents the site of the coronation of the third white Rajah of Sarawak, Charles Vyner Brooke. It received the visit of Queen Elizabeth II in 1972, is the home of the first ever golf course in East Malaysia (established in the 1920s), and is up to this day the training ground of many squash and swimming State-level and national-level athletes. Indeed, the Sarawak Club was used by the Sarawak State Government to host the squash and tennis competitions for the Third SUKMA Games in 1990.

In more recent times, The Sarawak Club is most associated with a tragic fire on the morning of 27 July 2006 that razed its whole premises to the ground over about 3 hours.

Within one year of the fire however, the Sarawak Club was fully restored. The centrepiece of the Sarawak Club – the Main Hall, was the site of the coronation of Rajah Charles Vyner Brooke and was part of the original clubhouse built on this site. Therefore, the Main Hall was treated as a heritage site and was restored almost entirely with the same material. In particular, Sarawak's world-renowned and valuable berlian timber continued to be used for its roofing truss, shingles and flooring. Red brick was also used for construction of the Main Hall walls.

Work is now well underway for the completion of a new 18-hole golf course adjacent to University Malaysia Sarawak (UNIMAS) in Kota Samarahan, complemented by a new clubhouse. The Sarawak Club regains the golf course which was lost when the land for its golf course was ceded back to the State Government in 1986. Completion of this new golf course will mean that The Sarawak Club shall thereafter have a City Branch and a Resort Branch.

Entry to The Sarawak Club membership is by invitation and introduction of existing members only. 

 

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