DestinAsian

DISTILLING THE DATAI

- By Christophe­r P. Hill

Fresh from a yearlong renovation to mark its 25th anniversar­y, a legendary Langkawi resort is embracing its rain forest setting as never before.

FRESH FROM A YEARLONG RENOVATION TO MARK ITS 25TH ANNIVERSAR­Y, A LEGENDARY LANGKAWI RESORT HAS BEEN UPDATED AND UPGRADED, EMBRACING ITS RAIN-FOREST SETTING AS NEVER BEFORE.

THE ENTIRE PALEOGEOLO­GICAL HISTORY OF MALAYSIA—MORE than half a billion years’ worth—happened to this tiny island,” declares Irshad Mobarak over dinner on the terrace of The Datai’s Beach Club restaurant. “All kinds of rock substrate were laid down over the eons: sandstone, limestone, shale, mudstone, chert. So there’s an incredible diversity of soil types too. This means lots of different flora, which in turn means lots of different butterflie­s—535 species in all, almost nine times what they have in the United Kingdom, and more than twice the number found in Sri Lanka. It’s incredible.”

And there’s plenty more than butterflie­s lurking in the dense rain forests and mangrove fringes of Langkawi, a 370-square-kilometer island off peninsular Malaysia’s Kedah coast. Just ask Mobarak. The self-taught naturalist has called Langkawi home for the last three decades, during which time he has acquired an encycloped­ic knowledge of the local wildlife. His statistics include 260 species of birds, among them three types of hornbills, Asian fairy bluebirds, rackettail­ed drongos, and brahminy kites, from which the island derives its name; dozens of different turtles and frogs and snakes; and 51 mammal species. The latter include the enigmatic colugo, a nocturnal oddity that looks like a cross between a lemur and a bat. As if on cue, three of the creatures glide into a sea hibiscus tree next to the terrace, their glowing red eyes flickering momentaril­y in the shadows.

Anyone familiar with Langkawi will have heard of Mobarak. A fixture at The Datai since the resort first opened on the island’s northwest coast in 1993, he’s something of a legend in these parts, and not just because of his powerful build and charming demeanor. Apart from being The Datai’s longstandi­ng resident naturalist, Mobarak has appeared in numerous documentar­ies about the unique natural history of Langkawi, which comprises both the main island and a scattering of smaller neighbors. He’s written a book on the subject too, and has spent time in the field with the great British botanist David Bellamy (a boyhood idol of his) and the late lepidopter­ist Bernard d’Abrera. The founder of a popular nature outfit called Junglewall­a, Mobarak also consults widely on conservati­on. At 60, he is arguably Malaysia’s most celebrated naturalist.

What’s got him excited these days, however, is The Datai’s sharpened focus on the environmen­t. Hidden in a 10-million-year-old

rain forest at the edge of the Andaman Sea, the resort has always had nature built into its DNA. Indeed, you don’t need to leave your room to see macaques and dusky langurs leaping through the trees, or to hear the whoosh of a hornbill flying past. But ahead of its 25th anniversar­y last year, The Datai embarked on a property-wide revamp that has gone well beyond cosmetic enhancemen­ts to its rooms and public areas. Doubling down on its sustainabi­lity commitment­s, the 26-hectare resort has phased out single-use plastics, built a waterbottl­ing plant, and establishe­d a permacultu­re garden to grow organic vegetables for its kitchens. By the end of this year, the plan is to produce zero waste.

Mobarak, for his part, now works out of a purposebui­lt nature center sited in a sandy grove just steps from the beach. Inspired by the form of a traditiona­l Borneo longhouse, the open bamboo-and-thatch structure houses a small library, a lounge area for nature talks, and a “tea corner” where guests can sample medicinal infusions made from foraged herbs like pegaga (Asiatic pennywort). Next to his office is a small laboratory equipped with microscope­s and tanks for growing corals, which Mobarak says will be transplant­ed to the reefs of Datai Bay—a rehabilita­tion effort that guest can participat­e in. “Simple science, but real science,” he calls it.

Two young marine biologists and his niece (a former Junglewall­a guide) have joined Mobarak’s team, allowing for a considerab­ly expanded menu of guest activities—everything from reef walks and guided kayaking excursions to bug hunts for kids. There’s also a new 65-meter-long elevated boardwalk through the nearby mangroves. Spanning a stream where otters can be spotted, it’s part of a nature trail that stretches for almost a kilometer through the resort, the high point of which (quite literally) is an observatio­n deck built 20 meters up around the trunk of a strangler fig. Accessed via a wooden suspension bridge, it provides an up-close look at the forest canopy.

More ambitious yet, Mobarak is heading a community-based initiative called the Datai Trust, comprising three main projects. The first, Fish for the Future, aims to protect the fragile reefs of Datai Bay from overfishin­g. As Mobarak explains, local inshore fishermen have seen their traditiona­l catches decline due to the encroachme­nt of big trawlers from Thailand and mainland Malaysia. “Desperate to feed their families, they’re now fishing right on the reef, which is destroying it,” he says. The solution? Sinking steelframe­d FADs—or fish aggregatin­g devices—at different sites around the bay, to act as artificial reefs where fish can propagate and provide anglers with alternate and sustainabl­e fishing grounds. Deployed in January, the devices have been eagerly welcomed by the local communitie­s, who will

also be able to supplement their incomes by selling fish directly to the resort.

The second project, Wildlife for the Future, will establish a network of wildlife corridors across the island to reconnect habitats that have been fragmented by farmland and road infrastruc­ture. As most of Langkawi’s animals are arboreal, this essentiall­y means creating “a tunnel of trees.” Mobarak has been collecting seeds to grow at an on-site nursery; when they are tall enough—he estimates between two and three years—the saplings will be planted along corridors that he’s already mapped out, enabling monkeys, squirrels, colugos, and other tree-dwelling species to cross over.

Then there’s Youth for the Future, which Mobarak describes as a club for the island’s restless teenagers to learn how to build, paddle, and sail outrigger canoes. With plans for monthly regattas and an annual jamboree, he sees it as a way to both teach Langkawi youth about a fading tradition, and to provide them with a healthy outlet for their energy.

“Tourism as an industry has taken a lot from this island,” says Mobarak, who credits The Datai’s general manager of the past four and a half years, Arnaud Girodon, with being incredibly supportive of all these initiative­s. “Now, we want to show how it can give back.” on the map for luxury travelers. The concept was groundbrea­king: a tropical island resort set not on its beachfront, but crouched on a forested ridge 300 meters back from the sea. (Today’s 13 beach villas are a much later addition.) Originally inaccessib­le by road, the site was selected by Aman resorts founder Adrian Zecha—an early partner in the project—as he surveyed Datai Bay’s jungly backdrop from a boat. With Singapore-based Australian architect Kerry Hill hired to design the hotel, the decision was made to place the main structures in the forest. “We felt that the biggest experience here was the jungle, not the sea, even though there’s a wonderful beach,” recalls Didier Lefort, the French architect and designer responsibl­e for the original interiors. “The sea you can get anywhere, but to be surrounded by tropical forest is very rare. That’s what makes The Datai.”

The results were visionary. Hill, who passed away last year, integrated the property into its surrounds by splitting most of the accommodat­ion among four low-slung buildings, all connected by breezy walkways and clad in tropical timber and locally quarried granite. Another 40 rooms occupied stilted “rainforest” villas scattered about the hillside. From the sea, the hotel was—and remains—almost invisible. Lefort’s interiors, meanwhile, were serene and understate­d. “Very modern for its time,” he says.

But as the resort approached its 25th anniversar­y, it was recognized that a substantia­l upgrade was in order. And so, in September

2017, The Datai closed its doors to undergo a yearlong, US$60 million refurbishm­ent—the most extensive yet for the property.

Longtime fans were anxious. Lefort, who Girodon brought back to oversee the renovation­s, remembers talking to guests ahead of the closure. “They would say, ‘Please, please, don’t touch The Datai. We like it as it is.’ And I would say ‘Don’t worry, don’t worry’—because there was never any plan to reinvent the place; The Datai has a huge number of repeat guests, and we knew we had to keep them happy. The exercise was to introduce some modernity while respecting the original spirit.”

For Lefort, that spirit had been eroded by a 2006 interior facelift that gussied up the guest rooms with darker-toned wood and other modificati­ons. He was particular­ly aghast at changes to the Dining Room, the resort’s fine-dining restaurant. “It was all black!” He shakes his head disapprovi­ngly. “And my horses, they painted my horses!” He’s referring to the two large wooden horses that stand guard in the lobby, which he picked up for the resort while rummaging through Mumbai’s Chor Bazaar. He had left the antique statues in the worn state in which he found them, charmed by their patina of age. But they had since been repainted. One of Lefort’s first decisions was to break out the paint remover and restore the equines to their distressed splendor.

He has also reinstated the rooms’ wooden panels—embellishe­d, as in his original design, with brass Indian door studs. While the layouts of the guest quarters have changed little, all the wiring, light- ing, and balau timber floors have been replaced. Taupe daybeds now frame balcony doors; built-in cabinets are lined with ceramic objets; torch-like sconces cast a mellow glow from their mirrored backplates; and bathrooms have been beautifull­y revamped around freestandi­ng composite-stone tubs. It’s a similar story in the forest villas, eight of which—thanks to the addition of three new units—come with their own pools. Lighter and airier now and with inviting canopied beds, these offer more privacy and space than the regular rooms, though they lack the sweeping views you get from the main wings.

Another hard-to-miss addition is the Datai Estate, which you’ll inevitably pass on the buggy ride to the Beach Club. Built from scratch, the private villa complex spans 3,500 square meters and comes with five bedrooms, two connected swimming pools, games rooms, and the services of a dedicated butler and chef—just the thing for a visiting potentate.

Elsewhere, the gym has been relocated from under the main swimming pool to a thatch-roofed pavilion near the beach, with floor-to-ceiling windows that look out to the Andaman Sea and the Thai island of Tarutao, less than 10 kilometers away. Next door, an enhanced water-sports center lends out snorkeling gear, windsurfer­s, kayaks, and catamarans—nothing noisy, of course.

At the spa, where treatments revolve around Malay healing traditions and ramuan “potions” made by infusing oils with medicinal foliage plucked from the herb garden and surroundin­g forest, an air-conditione­d treatment room has been added to the existing four

open-air spa villas. Also new is a mani-pedi studio by Bastien Gonzalez, the celebrated French nail guru.

The Datai’s restaurant­s have undergone alteration­s as well. For the Pavilion, a Thai outlet perched on stilts high above the grand staircase that zigzags down from the pool level, it was a simple extension. Down at the Beach Club, there’s now a seafood counter where diners can inspect the day’s catch, not to mention lighter furnishing­s and a reworked menu of casual bites like wagyu burgers and a terrific Caprese salad anchored by water-buffalo mozzarella.

Tucked into the forest, the Gulai House is a kampong-style Malay-Indian restaurant that, save for the introducti­on of a tandoor oven and gleaming show kitchen, remains much as it has for years, with rustic wooden furniture and a chorus of frogs as a soundtrack. But chef Adee Affende BinSudin has retooled the menu to incor- porate more regional Malaysian dishes; highlights include umai tiram (local oysters with chili, ginger, onion, and tomato salsa), kerabu

isi ketam (a Kedah-style crab salad tossed with young papaya and pomelo), and a toothsome beef rendang made from his grandmothe­r’s recipe.

Good as that all is, be sure to book at least one dinner at the Dining Room. Set below the lobby lounge by the side of the pool, it serves breakfast and lunch by day before transformi­ng into a romantic French restaurant at night. Lefort has banished all traces of black and remodeled the space with natural wood tones and hits of red; a shingled roof now extends over the terrace. Order the olive oil–poached halibut with seaweed sauce if it’s available, and be sure to save room for dessert: the boozy

baba au rhum, accompanie­d by a dollop of turmeric-infused Chantilly cream and hibiscus flower jelly, is the perfect Paris-by-way-of-the-tropics finish. At night, when the forest

closes in and The Datai’s manmade structures recede into the darkness, you can join a nocturnal walk with one of the nature guides. Flashlight­s in hand, you’re led along as the sounds of the jungle are identified and explained—the whir of cicadas, the croak of frogs, the hoot of an owl. You’ll likely spot a flying squirrel or a flying fox, perhaps a colugo or a civet cat. You’ll certainly catch the looks of wide-eyed wonder on the faces of your fellow walkers. Whether repeat guests or first-timers, they’re all pondering the magic of this enduringly unique corner of Langkawi. The Datai Langkawi, Jl. Teluk Datai, Langkawi, Malaysia; 60-4/9500500; thedatai.com; doubles from US$610

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 ??  ?? Clockwise fromleft: Seating at the resort’s beach bar; a spa attendant; poolside cabanas at the Beach Club; one of a pair of Indian horse statues that have stood guard in the lobby since The Datai first opened in 1993; poached halibut with onion cream and seaweed sauce at the Dining Room; the new mangrove boardwalk.
Clockwise fromleft: Seating at the resort’s beach bar; a spa attendant; poolside cabanas at the Beach Club; one of a pair of Indian horse statues that have stood guard in the lobby since The Datai first opened in 1993; poached halibut with onion cream and seaweed sauce at the Dining Room; the new mangrove boardwalk.
 ??  ?? Left: Kerabu isi ketam, a Kedahsyle crab salad featuring young papaya, pomelo, and island-grown herbs at the resort’s Malay restaurant, the Gulai House. Opposite: On the terrace of a streamside treatment villa at the spa.
Left: Kerabu isi ketam, a Kedahsyle crab salad featuring young papaya, pomelo, and island-grown herbs at the resort’s Malay restaurant, the Gulai House. Opposite: On the terrace of a streamside treatment villa at the spa.
 ??  ?? From left: Inside the Nature Centre; resident naturalist Irshad Mobarak on his new canopy walk; the Dining Room; the lily pond off the lobby.
From left: Inside the Nature Centre; resident naturalist Irshad Mobarak on his new canopy walk; the Dining Room; the lily pond off the lobby.
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