Colonial architecture in Surabaya
Colonial architecture in Surabaya (Dutch: Soerabaja) includes the legacy of neoclassical architecture and Dutch architecture built during the Dutch East Indies era. The old city in Surabaya is a tourist attraction but faces problems with the deterioration of older buildings. It includes Dutch architecture, has an Arab quarter and areas exhibiting Chinese influence.[1] Jembatan Merah is an area known for its Dutch architecture.[1]
Cosman Citroen designed a city hall in 1916 and planned the area of Ketabang. Museum Bank Indonesia, Surabaya is located in the former Bank of Java branch building. The House of Sampoerna i s a museum devoted to the history of clove cigarette (kretek) manufacturing in Indonesia and is housed in a Dutch colonial building (originally an orphanage) dating to 1864.[1][2]
Gallery
- Bijeenkomsthuis (meeting house)
- Entrance portal of "De ingangspoort" (Perseverance), Royal Factory Steam and other machines in the year 1857 by F.J.H. Baijer
- Harbor office in Surabaya and memorial on the occasion of the visit of Governor General Fock (September, 1922)
- City garden (late 19th century)
- Garden in Surabaya
- "Komediegebouw" Surabaya
- Heineken Brewery in Surabaya
- Sociƫteit Concordia (Concordia Society)
- Goebang train station (Surabaya Gubeng railway station)
- Post and Telegraph office
- Resident's house in Surabaya
- Pasar Besar in the background
- Grimm & Co. "cake palace" at Pasar Besar
- Goebang (now Gubeng district)
- Postcard of sluice
- Fountain and water carriers
- Governor General Fock visiting a school
- Hotel Embong Malang
- Piccolo Club Toendjoengan (signage on building says Hetwenkwe (sp?) Huis (1938)
- Kurkdjian photo studio (O. Kurkdjian & Co.)
- International trade office in Willemsplein
References
- Lonely Planet Indonesia Ryan Ver Berkmoes, Celeste Brash, Muhammad Cohen, Mark Elliott, Guyan Mitra, John Noble, Adam Skolnick, Iain Stewart, and Steve Waters Lonely Planet, Sep 1, 2010
- "House of Sampoerna website". Archived from the original on 2019-05-28. Retrieved 2020-07-25.
Further reading
- The heritage and impact of Dutch architecture and civil engineering in Surabaya and Malang Petra University Surabaya 2003