Cafe Batavia

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Cafe Batavia
Indies Empire style
LocationJakarta, Indonesia
AddressJalan Pintu Besar Utara
Coordinates6°08′04″S 106°48′46″E / 6.134410°S 106.812740°E / -6.134410; 106.812740
Current tenantsCafe Batavia
Completed1837[1]
OwnerEka Chandra
Design and construction
Architect(s)anonymous

Cafe Batavia is a restaurant located in Kota Tua (Old Town), Jakarta, Indonesia. It is one of the colonial landmarks facing the square Taman Fatahillah. The building where Cafe Batavia is established is the second oldest building in the square, second only to the former City Hall building of Batavia, which had been reestablished as the Jakarta History Museum.

Description

The wide shuttered wooden window of the gallery.
The Grand Salon of Café Batavia.

Cafe Batavia is located on the northwest corner of

teakwood
leads to the upper floor.

The upper floor features the 'Grand Salon', the main dining hall which is able to hold 150 guests. The Grand Salon, which is the gallery part of the building, is constructed of wood and features large shuttered windows, providing abundant light into the interior as well as a view of Taman Fatahillah and the colonial buildings surrounding it. The so-called Winston Churchill bar of Cafe Batavia was named “The World’s Best Bar” by Newsweek International in 1996.[3]

The interior of Cafe Batavia is furnished with a 1930s theme. Vintage photographs of 1930s celebrities and royalty decorate the main dining hall.[3]

History

The building of Cafe Batavia was constructed ca. the 1830s. It has been variously used as a residence, an office of the Dutch governors, and a warehouse.[3] For several years from around 1884, the ground floor of the building was occupied by the wholesale business of the trading firm, E. Dunlop & Co. The building also housed the offices of "Kongsi Tiga - Kantor Kapal Hadji", which arranged the Muslim pilgrimages from Batavia to the Middle East by steamship.[2]

In 1991, Cafe Betawi and the Paulo Gallery made their establishment in the building.[2] Paulo Gallery, an art gallery, was owned by Paul Hassan, a Frenchman and a close friend to the Indonesian Ministry of Education of that time Fuad Hassan.[1]

In 1990, Australian citizen Graham James purchased the building, at which time it was the only freehold property in Taman Fatahillah. James restored the building over 1992 to 1993, and established a restaurant. The 19th-century interior was decorated with items inspired from the 1930s.[2][4]

See also

  • List of colonial buildings and structures in Jakarta

References

  1. ^ a b Windoro Adi 2010, p. 70.
  2. ^ a b c d Merrillees 2012, p. 157.
  3. ^ a b c Figge 2009.
  4. ^ "Lonely Chic: An Art Deco Outpost Still Stands Apart". Jakarta Globe. Jakarta Globe. 2016. Retrieved November 24, 2016.

Cited works