A.A. Maramis Building
A.A. Maramis Building | |
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Gedung A.A. Maramis | |
The A.A. Maramis Building, formerly dubbed the Witte Huis or Gedong Putih, the "White House". | |
location within Jakarta | |
Former names | Palace of Governor-General Daendels, Paleis Waterlooplein (Palace of Waterloo Square), Het Witte Huis or Gedong Putih ("The White House"), Het Grote Huis ("The Big House") |
General information | |
Type | Government building |
Architectural style | Indies Empire style |
Location | Jakarta, Indonesia |
Coordinates | 6°10′09″S 106°50′14″E / 6.169257°S 106.837096°E |
Current tenants | Ministry of Finance |
Construction started | March 7, 1809[1] |
Owner | The Ministry of Finance of Indonesia |
Design and construction | |
Architect | Ir. J. Tromp |
The A.A. Maramis Building is a historic building and a national heritage located in Jakarta, Indonesia. The building is currently the Ministry of Finance headquarters. The turn of the 19th-century building is the second oldest surviving building in Central Jakarta (after Istana Negara on Jalan Veteran) in terms of when it was started.[2]
History
The beginning of the construction of the building began in Weltevreden. Weltevreden was a southern suburb of old Batavia. The last Governor-General of the VOC era, P.G. van Overstraten, had purchased the land from his predecessor, Governor-General P.A. van der Parra, to be transformed into the new official seat of the governor-general. The area first developed when people began to escape from the increasingly unhealthy old city. The initial migration began after the old city's malaria epidemic in 1732.[3]
Development of the area as the new seat of government started with Governor-General Herman Willem Daendels. He ordered the destruction of the original city wall to provide bricks for a new palace on the Waterlooplein.[4] Construction of the great palace began on March 7, 1809. The plan shows a grand residence intended as the private palace for the governor-general flanked with much smaller buildings for administrative work. Despite Daendels' intention to reside in the new palace, he never had the chance to stay because he was ordered by Napoleon to command the Grande Armée and was stationed in Modlin Fortress, Poland.[1] Daendels' successor, Governor-General Janssens, installed thatched roof on the unfinished parts of the building. When construction was stopped in 1811 after the British invasion of Java, the work was only half finished. With the governor's palace unfinished, the Governor-General of Batavia would reside at the mansion of van Braam in Rijswijk (now Jalan Veteran)[1]
Under the order of Governor-General du Bus de Gisignies, construction of the building was started again in 1826 under the supervision of Ir. J. Tromp. It was finally completed in 1828, about nineteen years after it had begun. The completion is commemorated in a plaque written: MDCCIX - Condidit Daendels, MDCCCXXVIII - Erexit DUBUS currently kept in Jakarta Cathedral. The finished building was popularly referred as Daendel's Palace. It was also referred as the White House (Dutch Witte Huis) and the Big House (Grote Huis).[5]
Despite the completion of the building, the "governor's palace" was never used as a palace. It was described as "huge and ugly".[6] There was a small garden behind the palace known as Tuin Du Bus (Du Bus Garden), but the plants did not grow and people would not walk there.[7] Over the years it has housed numerous government bureaus and departments including the post office and the state printing office at the ground floor of the main building.[1] There was also the general clerk's department.[8]
The building became too cramped for its original intention as a palace and so in 1869 a new palace for the governor was planned. The new palace, known as the Paleis te Koningsplein, was completed in 1873 facing Koningsplein (King's Square). Other buildings were used as the High Court (Hoogeregtshof, Hoogerechter, Algemene Secretarie.) On May 1, 1948, the High Court was relocated to a building north of the Castle.[1]
Since the early 1950s, the building has been used as the headquarter of the Indonesian Ministry of Finance.[2] The building was named A.A. Maramis building, after an Indonesian politician who was involved in the struggle for Indonesian independence, and was Indonesia's Ministry of Finance for several periods.
Design
The palace was designed by J.C. Schultze in a style popular in French at that time, the Empire Style; the subsequent style conformed into the tropical climate of Indonesia became known as the Indies Empire style. Design of the palace consists of a 160 m (520 ft) long two-storeyed main building intended for the residence of Governor-General Daendels himself. The private residence is flanked with two wings to its left and right to be used for administration, guests, stables, and carriage-houses.[1]
The palace was constructed using the bricks from the 17th-century Kasteel Batavia which was dismantled in 1809.[1]
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to A.A. Maramis Building. |
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Gedung Departemen Keuangan" [Finance Department Building]. Visit Jakarta (in Indonesian). jakarta.co.id. 2010. Archived from the original on August 20, 2010. Retrieved July 8, 2016.
- 1 2 Merrillees 2015, p. 46.
- ↑ Silver 2007, p. 41.
- ↑ Silver 2007, p. 42.
- ↑ "Palace of Daendels". Ensiklopedi Jakarta (in Indonesian). Dinas Komunikasi, Informatika dan Kehumasan Pemprov DKI Jakarta. 2010. Archived from the original on July 8, 2016. Retrieved July 8, 2016.
- ↑ Indië, geïllustreerd weekblad voor Nederland en koloniën. Vol. 1. Semarang-Soerabaja: G.C.T. v. Dorp & Co. p. 132a http://www.indischeliterairewandelingen.nl/index.php/aanvullende-lectuur/23-indie-geillustreerd-weekblad#Indie-geillustreerd-weekblad-3-149a. Retrieved November 16, 2016. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ Buitenzorg Reizen. Het Paleis van Daendels
- ↑ Merrillees 2012, p. 95.
Cited works
- Merrillees, Scott (February 1, 2012). Greetings from Jakarta: Postcards of a Capital 1900-1950. Jakarta: Equinox Publishing. ISBN 9789793780887.
- Merrillees, Scott (2015). Jakarta: Portraits of a Capital 1950-1980. Jakarta: Equinox Publishing. ISBN 9786028397308.
- Silver, Christopher (2007). Planning the Megacity: Jakarta in the Twentieth Century. Oxfordshire: Routledge. ISBN 9781135991227.