The top-most ceiling, perhaps most interestingly of all, houses a traditional theatre hall that is called Koothambalam in contemporay Malayalam language. Typically a temple-allied structure, it occasionally hosts for the museum visitors some of Kerala’s folk and classical performing arts. “Even so, we are basically an architectural gallery,” says the museum’s owner George J. Thaliath, an art dealer hailing from Varapuzha, 25 km northwest of Kochi and not far from what is of late historically referred to as Muziris. The museum Koothambalam crowning the museum has a massive 18th-century edifice made of wood weighing almost 64 tonnes without any support down its middle. As the description suggests, the whole weight is equitably disbursed through the lintels surrounding the entire hall. “Overall, the venture is a result of no less than three decades,” he informs about the museum that involved a teamwork of 62 skilled craftsmen and eventually featuring 5,000 artefacts, primarily from the area that is now Kerala and largely belong to over the past 1,000 years.