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Thread: Different place, same Zouk

  1. #1
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    Default Different place, same Zouk

    http://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyl...lace-same-zouk

    Different place, same Zouk

    Zouk founder Lincoln Cheng will invest $10 million in the new venue, which he hopes to start operating by June next year.

    Jul 3, 2015, 5:50 am SGT

    Iconic nightclub will keep key elements when it moves to Clarke Quay next year

    Melissa Kok
    Nightlife Correspondent


    Zoukers and Zoukettes can fret a little less. Zouk's founder says the iconic nightclub will preserve its essence when it moves to its new home in Clarke Quay next year.

    Mr Lincoln Cheng says he will be keeping the core elements of the nightclub when it moves from Jiak Kim Street to Clarke Quay next year. He hopes to start operating at the new location by June.

    Speaking to Life just three days after announcing the club's move to the Cannery in Clarke Quay, Mr Cheng, 67, says he will try, as best as he can, to keep the things that Zouk regulars associate most with the club - even its little hot dog kiosk that has fed many weary Zoukettes in the wee hours.

    The deep house grooves of the club's Velvet Underground and the hip-hop and R&B beats of Phuture will remain.

    Although it is still early days and no concrete plans have been made, Mr Cheng says: "Nothing is ever going to be exactly the same, but as long as the key factors remain constant, we can carry on at Clarke Quay."

    He says $10 million will be invested in the new venue.

    Zouk announced on Sunday that it had secured a 30,000 sq ft location in Clarke Quay, just two days shy of the deadline issued by the Government for the club to find an alternative location.

    If it failed to secure a new venue, it would have been forced to close by December, when its lease expires.

    The award-winning nightspot, which was founded in 1991 and has since grown to be among the top 10 nightclubs in the world, was given the boot because it was deemed incompatible with the neighbouring vicinity.

    The authorities said the club's presence led to noise and littering in an area likely to see more housing under the Urban Redevelopment Authority's Master Plan.

    Calling the decision a "foregone conclusion", Mr Cheng says: "I will miss Jiak Kim Street. It's very sad because next year, we would have been here for a quarter of a century. But we have to think about the next quarter of a century."

    He says he had considered several locations, including a crystal pavilion at Marina Bay Sands, the Singapore Flyer at Raffles Avenue, the old Kallang Airport, and South Beach, a new residential and commercial complex in Beach Road.

    He found none of them suitable. South Beach's space was too small; it was too expensive to build a club from scratch at the Flyer; and he found the acoustics at the crystal pavilion terrible for a nightclub.

    He deemed the former Kallang Airport "too risky" as he is unsure of new developments in the vicinity and whether they would impact running a club there.

    But a silver lining came when public-listed group LifeBrandz, an anchor tenant at Clarke Quay, surrendered 57,000 sq ft of space in March.

    LifeBrandz was forced to close all its food and beverage outlets, including nightclubs Fenix Room and Aquanova, after a series of business failures and was unable to pay wages on time.

    Taking over its outlets was an "immediate thought" when news of its exit broke, says Mr Cheng.

    "Not many places have a size that can fit us... its space was quite suitable and it's part of the Clarke Quay complex, so we would probably have more foot traffic. And it's readily available," he says.

    Zouk's general manager Benny Heng, 38, says the club initiated talks with Clarke Quay as early as January, but plans sped up after LifeBrandz's exit.

    The lease was finally inked last Thursday, but Mr Cheng says details of his contract with landlord CapitaMalls Asia are confidential.

    He says the club will continue to do what it does best - bring in top international DJs, feature up-andcoming talent on the cusp of DJ stardom, and introduce new electronic music to clubbers.

    "We'll try to keep that same culture and ethos of what Zouk has created over the last 24 years," he says.

    Some tenants are welcoming Zouk's arrival at Clarke Quay.

    Mr Dennis Foo, 62, chairman of Citybar Holdings, which operates Shanghai Dolly, calls it a "triple win" and a "marriage in the waiting".

    He says it means that Zouk "will find a place for the next generation of Zoukers and Zoukettes", and it will complement the rest of the nightlife offerings in Clarke Quay and vice versa.

    With more choices for partygoers, "the precinct will become a top one-stop nightlife destination in the region, if not the world".

    Mr Dominic Han, 33, head of marketing for The Pump Room microbrewery-cum-club, believes Zouk will "bring some life back to the area" as the club has a loyal following and "will definitely bring a crowd".

    Mr Han, noting that business in Clarke Quay has slowed down in the past year with tightened liquor licensing hours and the revival of Chijmes in Victoria Street as a nightlife destination, says: "I see Zouk coming here as a good move. It will be something new in Clarke Quay to check out."

    Mr Cheng believes Zouk's brand name will pull in a crowd when it opens in Clarke Quay.

    "Everybody will be curious as to what we've done in Clarke Quay, so I expect an overwhelming crowd," he says.

    "Moving there is like having a blank canvas that you can paint on and start afresh. The key elements will be the same but, at the same time, we can do a lot of new things we haven't thought of before, now that we're part of an entertainment complex."

  2. #2
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    Default Dilapidated warehouses to top club

    http://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyl...es-to-top-club

    Dilapidated warehouses to top club

    Three derelict warehouses (far left) were transformed into Zouk in 1991. The club used to house a boutique as well as a restaurant (left), among other things.

    Jul 3, 2015, 5:50 am SGT


    If Zouk founder Lincoln Cheng had not had his way in 1990, three dilapidated warehouses in Jiak Kim Street might have become a seafood restaurant or storage for antiques.

    The Government had then tendered the 40,000 sq ft space along the Singapore River for temporary use, and two such bids had been submitted.

    But Mr Cheng's proposal for a nightclub won in the end.

    By 1991, he had transformed the derelict buildings into Zouk, Singapore's first commercial dance club that brought electronic music to the forefront.

    "I used to work in the Central Business District and I'd pass by Jiak Kim Street every day on my way to work," says the 67-year-old, who is a trained architect. "The warehouses were completely derelict. No roof, crumbling walls. But I saw something in them."

    In 1991, Zouk, which means "village party" in French-Caribbean countries such as Martinique and Guadeloupe, housed a boutique, Mediterranean-style restaurant, MTV bar and dance hall featuring electronic dance music.

    The concept was inspired by his trips to the dance music capital of Ibiza, Spain, where he was exposed to club culture and the balearic house music that emerged in the mid-1980s.

    DJs could use his private vinyl collection for their DJ sets - a practice that continues today.

    Those early days were particularly tough as house music was still considered relatively underground. In fact, Mr Cheng says, his two business partners suggested he convert part of the club's space into a KTV lounge.

    "They thought KTV would be popular. I refused to change my vision for a fast return. We couldn't agree, so I bought them out," he recounts.

    Sticking to his guns paid off. Eventually, Zouk became a trendsetter in the clubbing circuit, building a strong community of dance music fans.

    It was - and still is - the place to catch top international DJs, such as Paul Oakenfold, Fatboy Slim, Tiesto, Hardwell and David Guetta. And it is also home to Singapore's longestrunning themed club night - the 1980s-themed Mambo Jambo party.

    The award-winning club has consistently been ranked among the top 10 clubs globally, in British magazine DJ Mag's annual Top 100 clubs poll, for the past five years.

    In its 24-year history, Zouk has seen it all.

    It survived a drug bust in 1995, which led to the club's closure for eight months.

    It also outlasted fierce competition from brand-name clubs such as Ministry of Sound (MoS) and Cafe del Mar, as well as home-grown nightclub The Butter Factory, which closed down earlier this year. MoS closed in 2008 and Cafe del Mar in 2012.

    "Concept is forever in the process of evolution. We have to see what the young people want and we have to balance it with what we want. We want to make them understand what's the next big trend in music. It's a two-way street," Mr Cheng says of how he has kept his club relevant all these years.

    Former Zouk marketing manager Tracy Phillips, who worked with the club from 1998 to 2009, says some of her best memories at Zouk were of conceptualising events that introduced new music and promoted home-grown talent.

    Now the director of creative consultancy Present Purpose, the 37-year-old adds: "Zouk is in a class of its own. It has such a long and amazing legacy to uphold.

    "This means it has to work harder to stay relevant."

    Melissa Kok

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