The Singapore Cricket Club has been many things to many people since 1852: colonial bastion, postwar social hub, multicultural members’ institution. The silhouette of its low-slung clubhouse on Connaught Drive overlooking the Padang is among the most recognisable in the city. What it has almost never had, over those 174 years, however, is an interior that kept pace with the ambitions of its membership. That changed this past April when Rashi Tulshyan, the young founder of Singapore’s Studio HP, shut the doors of the Main Lounge for 10 days and emerged with something the club’s members almost certainly didn’t see coming.




