Ideas Manzil: Bangladesh’s first heritage accommodation property

Posted on 19. Nov, 2008 by Mikey Leung in Photography, Responsible Travel
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Ideas Manzil Room 101~story and photos by Mikey Leung~

Barry Ison likes to get things done.

“So what?” you might say. But Ison’s choice of where to get things done might strike you as confusing, perhaps even crazy. The notion of creating new hospitality businesses in Bangladesh, one of the world’s least-travelled, disaster-prone countries might elicit such a response. But Ison, a self-proclaimed optimist, believes that Bangladesh’s redeeming qualities make it just the right place to operate.

“What I’m doing is not totally unique,” he says. “There are many Bangladeshis and expatriates who have given years of their lives in an effort to try and change things. My motivation is probably similar to theirs: somebody has to do something to help.”

Ideas Manzil Room 101Help Bangladesh. It is a notion that for the last 30 years has defined the country’s world image as a broken country. Beset with floods, cyclones, poverty and corruption, it has now become the country with the most number of non-government organisations in the world, with some estimating that over 20,000 such groups now work to better the lives of the poor. But Ison is critical of these organisations, saying that they haven’t always achieved the results they set out to accomplish.

“I’m an optimist,” he says. “To me Bangladesh presents a lot of positives, positive potentials. It has had a very unfortunate period of bad leadership and bad role models, bad developments where a lot of money has been thrown at problems without a lot of thought, and with the seeming feelings that money will solve the problems.”

Crafts room
Despite these problems, Ison has stuck to his guns. In opening Ideas Manzil, he is attempting to revive traditions that today have been discarded in favour of modern development. His guesthouse is Bangladesh’s first ‘heritage’ property, a place where Bangladesh culture is celebrated in the form of intricate handicrafts, personal hospitality and old world comfort.

“When we look at the products I’ve been trying to revive, they have been a revival of old skills and previous traditions,” says Ison. “Same thing goes for a lot of the other leather products, wooden products. What we’re trying to do through Ideas Manzil is step back and look at what the country was like several years ago, or even a previous era.”

A tour of his guesthouse does indeed give guests a taste of that old world Bangladeshi charm. Ideas Manzil is located in a quiet neighbourhood of Gulshan, the main area that houses all of Dhaka’s foreign missions and international NGO offices. Ison has refitted an old house of the neighbourhood with four guest rooms, rooftop restaurant, handicrafts boutique and quiet courtyards (hopefully it will be even more quiet when nearby construction is finished).

Each of the four guestrooms (except one) has a sitting room decorated with rare antiques such as ancient terracottas and silverware, while each bedroom features an antique wardrobe and king-size four-poster bed. Modern bathrooms complement the design, while Mughal-style doors and carvings decorate the entire property. In short, the Manzil (Abaric term for ‘house’) feels like a kind of living museum, a place where guests can experience a taste of the way that Bengal’s Mughal lords used to live.

Heritage properties like Ison’s are now common in India, where old buildings are frequently restored and often converted to guesthouses in an effort to both preserve cultural heritage and create successful tourism businesses. In Bangladesh, Ison’s property is one of the first to restore and celebrate this form of hospitality in a way that is uniquely ‘Bangladeshi.’ He believes that if this business is successful, the potential of its impact will be realised when others steal—that’s right, steal—his idea.

“Bangladeshis do like to copy,” says Ison. “If I set up a ‘heritage’ establishment that reflects the traditions and culture and nature of what I feel is the true Bangladesh, then perhaps other people will copy me. And I can have an impact on a relatively large number of people.”

Perhaps Ison is on to something, as it would be good if others also stole some of his behind-the-scenes practices, as his notion of helping Bangladesh goes beyond preserving its culture in his guesthouse. He is also making a very conscious decision about who to hire for work at Ideas Manzil.

“What I’m trying to do is give training to people from lower income levels, people who come from the village, who have perhaps grade five to grade eight education,” he says.
“I give them in house training, I take them travelling around the region and show them what food and hospitality is like in those parts. With this cumulative experience, we work together try to create food, service, menus and tables that reflects the tremendous hospitality that has been the tradition of Bangladesh for a long, long time.”

On those fronts, Ison is doing a decent job at Ideas Manzil. It’s very friendly, prompt and unobtrusive at the same time. Unlike many other guesthouses, where service staff often barge into unlocked rooms without even knocking first, Ison’s staff are polite, helpful and seem empowered to think and act on their own.

The food and hospitality scores well too. Ison’s particular focus is on freshly prepared food, and to that end orders need to be placed in advanced or you can trust in the fixed menu that offered by staff. His restaurant serves home-style versions of Indian, Thai and Bangladeshi cuisine. They are home-style in the sense they aren’t totally authentic versions of the above cuisines, but they certainly are tasty and most importantly, fresh. Ison is also teaching his staff to prepare western deserts, which is a real treat and somewhat hard to find in Bangladesh.

And finally, one last question that had to be asked: What does Ison truly think about the tourism potential of Bangladesh?

“So many countries you go to you to, you live in environments that have been totally artificially reproduced,” he says. “In Bangladesh what you see is what you get. It is totally authentic. You want poverty? It’s here. You want beauty? It’s here. I have never seen so many greens in my life as in Bangladesh. You want warmth and hospitality and friendship? It is here.”

“Bangladesh has done something for them, in terms of their experiences, particularly in terms of relating to people, Bangladeshi or expatriate from different parts of the world. You can do so many things here that are unique and new, which in other countries have already been done. That kind of challenge is attractive to people who like to get things done.”

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6 Responses to “Ideas Manzil: Bangladesh’s first heritage accommodation property”

  1. Mikey Leung 18 March 2009 at 10:02 am #

    I would like to offer some other points of view:

    I think Ideas Manzil is a great example of a guesthouse, and the occasional party is no different than a Bangladeshi wedding event. I can think of a few of my neighbours in Dhaka and at a previous residence in Chittagong who have had multi-day wedding parties late into the night keeping me awake, on several occasions. Bangladesh is a noisy place, especially Dhaka. So, if you want peace and quiet it’s best to go outside the city for a few days. There are never expat parties on weeknights, only weekends, where as Bengali wedding parties can be anytime.

    About Barry’s permits: regardless of whether your assertion is true or false, getting permits for anything in Bangladesh is a difficult and painful process. One simply only need look at the multitude of vehicles with ‘Applied For Registration’ on their license plates to get a sense of how difficult it is to do something that should be very simple. But the best people don’t get bogged down by the paperwork, they do something because it benefits the country and the people who live here. In this sense I applaud Barry’s work.

    My two cents.

  2. Neighbour 11 March 2009 at 10:10 am #

    This Guesthouse contributes to alot of noise pollution in the neighbourhood.
    It holds parties late into the night with loud music with no consideration for the residences
    nearby.
    It is a poor example of a Guesthouse, and show the inconsideration of expats in Dhaka.
    The Guesthouse is also illegal, and Barry did not get the proper permits to build.

  3. Alexwebmaster 3 March 2009 at 3:04 pm #

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  4. sharik choudhury 20 November 2008 at 6:42 am #

    A great initiative, i hope its successful. i particularly think the idea of employing people of lower socio economoc groups is great and offers a different perspective and working enviorment than they would otherwise have access to in the very class and pigment concious bangladesh.

  5. Kawsar 19 November 2008 at 11:16 pm #

    The ‘Ideas Manzil’ is a great idea! It offers both past and present of unique beauty of Bangladeshi culture!
    The number one problem of Bangladesh is not cyclone or flood (Bangladesh rather welcomes a moderate flood to keep the land fertile). Did you notice how quickly Bangladeshi common people helps themselves, gets up and moves on after a natural calamity? But the greatest problem of Bangladesh is bad leadership and corruption. With the help of an honest and able leadership Bangladeshi people could go a long way!
    Bangladesh also have world’s biggest NGO (BRAC, also serving in Afganistan …etc), Nobel Peace prize winning Micrio-Credit organization Grameen Bank (also serving many other countries like India, East timour, some Carreabean countries, East European countries…), Proshika etc are doing good. But not all of the 2000 are performing well.
    Nowhere you will find such a greenery and natural beauty of Bangladeshi country side, mighty rivers, common people are only part of this nature with their softness, traditional hospitality, lyrical sensitivity, delicious food…..
    Thanks to all who are helping to rediscover Bangladesh!


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