Analysis of Facade Typology of “Dutch” Shophouses in
Transcription
Analysis of Facade Typology of “Dutch” Shophouses in
Analysis of Facade Typology of “Dutch” Shophouses in Melaka Robert C.M. Weebers (1), Yahaya Ahmad (2) and Zuraini M.A. (3). 1. 2. 3. PhD Candidate, Faculty of Built Environment, University of Malaya, Malaysia. ([email protected]) Associate Professor, Deputy Dean Research and Post Graduate, Faculty of Built Environment, University of Malaya, Malaysia ([email protected]) Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Built Environment, University Malaya, Malaysia. ([email protected]) Abstract Shophouses in Melaka are not totally “Dutch” in design and decoration. The 37 shophouses, which belong to this study, have Dutch, Chinese and Portuguese architectural and decorative influences. Dutch characteristics are the door and rectangular window in two halves. Others have a door in one piece with a rectangular window and a window, small or large, in the façade of the first floor. The width of the facade was introduced by the Dutch. Chinese architectural characteristics of the shophouses are the simple and very functional form. Some Chinese decorative elements of shophouses are: a fire wall in the form of a “cat crawling” square ventilation holes and an indoor screen. As of the eighteenth century Portuguese influences are also seen in the shophouses in the gable endings. It can also be argued that the design of the façade is not after any “Dutch” design but that these kind of facades are commonly found in the Southeast Asia region. Keywords: Southeast Asia, Dutch, heritage, shop houses 1 1. Introduction Melaka has some very characteristic buildings among these are shophouses these buildings were designed by Dutch government officials, traders, or private persons. The construction of the houses was most probably done by (Chinese) craftsmen who introduced their own architectural elements. (Laurens Vis 1988:14) According to Laurens Vis (1988:116) some houses in Melaka have been highlighted to show the features of the Dutch architecture overseas. It appears that the seventeenth-century houses have been established according to the Dutch building traditions. Plastering of the walls, the ridge turning parallel to the street so the façades are at the side of the house and the addition of galleries in that period are the main addition in that period. As of the eighteenth century, the houses are influenced by local features, with Melaka, as in the former Ceylon, a Portuguese influence can be observed in the gable endings. These “Dutch” shophouses can be divided in three types: A, B and C on the following characteristics. Type A: Door in two halves or in one part on the right hand-side in the façade of the house. Window in two halves or in one part on the left hand-side of the door. One window on the first floor. Type B: Door in two halves or in one part on the left hand-side in the front of the house. Window in two halves or in part on the right hand-side of the door. One window on the first floor. Type C: Door, in two halves, in the middle of the façade of the house. Two windows on each side of the door and two windows on the first floor. Figure 1: Types of shophouses Source: Robert C.M. Weebers The location of the shophouses are in the following streets: Dutch Shophouses Street Numbers Quantity Not Even Jalan Bukit Cina 75,95 2 2 Jalan Tun Tan Cheng Lock (Heerenstraat) Even 6,8,24,26,34,38,46,5 4,56,66,68,72,120. 13 Jalan Hang Jebat (Jonkerstraat) Not even 7,61,163,183. Not even 29c Jalan Hang Kasturi (Tweede Brugwal Straat) (Second Cross Street) Even 2,6,10,16 Jalan Kubu Even 8,12,16c. Even 142 Jalan Tengkera 4 1 4 3 1 Not even 83, 177, 217, 219, 251, 255, 257, 259, 263 9 37 Figure 2: Table of the streets and numbers of the shophouses Source: Robert C.M. Weebers 3 JALAN KUBU JALAN TENGKERA JALAN HANG JABAT (JONKERSTRAAT) JALAN HANG KASTURI JALAN BUKIT C INA JALAN TUN TAN CHENG LOCK (HEERENSTRAAT) Figure 3: The Core and Buffer zones in Melaka. Source: Nomination Dossier for Registration of Historic Cities of the Straits of Malacca: Melaka and George Town, p.11. 2. Design The characteristics of these “Dutch” shophouses in Melaka are that they are two stories high. They have a narrow front due to the tax levied on the width of the façade by the Dutch government of Melaka. This was a typical “Dutch” feature because some houses in the Netherlands have narrow façades as well. This is because of tax reasons too. The façade of these shophouses is between 3.64 and 6.09 meters wide and between 6.00 and 8.00 meters high. They have a covered walkway in front of the house. The distinctive features of the shophouses are: on the ground floor there is a rectangular window and a door which are both either in two parts or in one part. On the first floor there are either one, two, three windows or one large window. All two stories All narrow Front Between 3.64 - 6.09 meters width 4 Height All covered walkway or front porch Decorative elements Materials Between 6.00 - 8.00 meters Between 3.64 - 6.09 meters Beams, hinges, wall anchors, hardwood framing, louvered windows, tile roofing and terracotta floor tiles. Bricks Floor tiles (terracotta) roof tiles Figure 4: Characteristics of the shop houses Source: Robert C.M. Weebers The majority of the 37 “Dutch” shophouses (25) have the door on the right and the window on the left (Type A). 10 shop houses have the door on the left and the window on the right (Type B) and only one type (Type C) (2) has the door in the middle of the façade with on either side a window. The shophouse in Melaka has a façade which is between 3.64 and 6.09 meters wide. The height is between 6.00 and 8.00 meters. Figure 5: Shop house on Jalan Tun Tan Cheng Lock 56 Source: Robert C. M. Weebers The door in two halves was also a feature in some houses in the Netherlands which were used as shops. (Haan/Haagsma 1990:66) In the winter, the door would be closed, with warmer weather it would be open and everyone could walk in or out from the street, or from the house into the street. The effect was that the street became an extension of the house. In the shophouses of type A1 and B2 the rectangular window has two outward (downward and upward) turning wooden shutters. The bottom part would be used to place merchandise on. In front of the window a rattan screen was sometimes placed. This made it possible to look into the street without being seen. 5 According to Johannes Widodo “Ordinary Chinese in Melaka lived in small row houses made of brick. The front of the house was a two storey building used mainly as a shop, the front terrace was an indispensable part of each dwelling unit, and was not open to its adjacent units. This early typology of dwelling could be found everywhere within the old core of coastal settlements all over Southeast Asia”. (Widodo 2004:100) 3. Typology The types of shophouses are to be divided in types: A, B and C. Main Type Sub Description, Streets and Graphics. Types A A1 A1 has in the façade on the ground floor a door on the righthand side and a rectangular window on the left-hand side. Both in two halves. And one window on the first floor. Jalan Hang Kasturi 10 16 Jalan Tun Tan Cheng Lock 56 6 A2 A2 has in the façade on the ground floor a door in two halves on the right hand-side and on the left hand-side a rectangular window and one window on the first floor. Jalan Tun Tan Cheng Lock 61 A3 120 A3 has in the façade on the ground floor a door on the right-hand side and a rectangular window in two halves on the left-hand side and one window on the first floor. Jalan Tengkera 83 Jalan Tun Tan Cheng Lock 46 A4 72 A4 has in the façade on the ground floor a door on the righthand side a rectangular window on the left-hand side and one 7 window on the first floor. Jalan Bukit Cina 95 Jalan Tun Tan Cheng Lock 7 24 26 Jalan Hang Kasturi 2 6 8 Jalan Kubu 8 16c Jalan Tengkera 142 A5 177 259 A5 has in the façade on the ground floor a door on the righthand side a rectangular window on the left- hand side and two windows on the first floor. Jalan Bukit Cina Jalan Tengkera 217 A6 257 75 A6 has in the façade on the ground floor a door on the righthand side a rectangular window on the left-hand side and one window with on each side two smaller ones on the first floor. 9 Jalan Tun Tan Cheng Lock 163 A7 A7 has in the façade on the ground floor a door on the righthand side a rectangular window on the left hand side and on the first floor, which is made entirely out of wood, one window. Jalan Tun Tan Cheng Lock Jalan Tengkera 183 219 Total 25 B B1 B1 has in the façade on the ground floor a door on the lefthand side and a rectangular window on the right-hand side both in two halves and one window on the first floor. 10 Jalan Tun Tan Cheng Lock 6 B2 8 54 B2 has in the façade on the ground floor a door on the lefthand side and a rectangular window on the right-hand side and one window on the first floor. Jalan Tengkera 263 Jalan Tun Tan Cheng Lock 34 B3 38 66 68 B3 has in the façade on the ground floor a door on the lefthand side and a rectangular window on the right-hand side and a very big window on the first floor. 11 Jalan Kubu Jalan Hang Jebat 12 29c Total 10 C C1 C1 has in the façade on the ground floor a door in two halves on the right-hand side and a window on each side of the door and two windows on the first floor. Jalan Tengkera 251 255 Total 2 Grand Total 37 Figure 6: Shop houses in Melaka Source: Robert C.M. Weebers 4. Building Materials The houses are built of yellow coloured bricks which could have been baked locally.1 (Ancient Ceylon 1996:7/11) They are Dutch in design: rectangular in size, quite light, not so high and not very thick. The walls are one brick deep. The walls at the outside of the house are plastered. It is possible to date the houses by the materials used: bricks used in the 17th and 18th centuries are placed with lime mortar 1 According to Encik Iesnordin. Curator of the Architecture Museum in Melaka. 12 (lime mixed with sand) (Ancient Ceylon 1996:113/123). Bricks placed in the 20th century would have cement.2 The sloping roofs are covered with tiles. These were, sometimes, taken as ballast on the ships which came from the Netherlands or they were locally made. (Ancient Ceylon 1996:7) Lastly there are the typically terracotta tiles in the walkway in front of the house. 5. a. Decorative Dutch Decorative Influences Decorative elements of Dutch origin in the shophouses are the door and rectangular window on the ground floor in two halves and the window on the first floor. The frames of these windows are made of hardwood. In the window foldable, downward and upward turning shutters, are placed were merchandise could be exhibited for sale.3 On the first floor there are outward turnings, shutters in the windows which are made of timber. Figure 7: A house in the Netherlands with a window with shutters on the ground floor. Source: Painting: De zeven werken van barmartigheid, Meester van Alkmaar, First half of the 16th century. Source: Architectuur van Erasmus, 1990. p.66. Other decorative elements are the iron hinges on the doors and windows. These hinges are Dutch in design and allow the windows to open inward or outward. Over the door or windows, in the outside wall, small rectangular of semi-circular 2 According to Encik Iesnordin.. Curator of the Architecture Museum in Melaka. According to the British Lime Association: Lime mortars have high water retention, creating an improved bond as there is more contact between unit and mortar. Retention of water in mortar improves carbonation in pure lime mortars and results in best conditions for early hydration of cement lime mortars thus reducing cracking and water penetration into hardened mortar joints. 13 vents are placed (Measured drawings, Northwest, 2001:290). Sometimes these houses have iron wall anchors in the outside walls of the houses mostly on the level of the first floor. These were put there to secure the beams which were in the walls on the inside of the house. The doors and windows have heavy hardwood framing. Big hinges (Figure 8a and 8b), wall anchors (Figure 8c and 8d) heavy hardwood framing (Figure 8e), louvered windows (Figure 8f), tile roofing (Figure 8g) and the terracotta tiles (Figure 8h). Figure 8a Big Hinges Figure 8b Big Hinges Figure 8e Heavy Hardwood Framing Figure 8c Wall anchors Figure 8f Louvered Windows Figure 8d Wall anchors Figure 8g Tile Roofing Figure 8h Terracotta floor Tiles Figure 8: Dutch decorative elements Source: Robert C.M. Weebers Ornamentation was minimal most occurring in the form of cornices. The reason could be that the owners or construction workers could not afford elaborate ornamentation (Measured drawings. Northwest. 2001:30). The walls were plastered white. b. Chinese Architectural and Decorative Influences Chinese architectural characteristics of the shophouses are the simple and very functional form. Gable roofs are by far the most commonly found type in Malaysia, although examples of hipped and half-hipped examples are also to be found. (Kohl 1986:2) The Chinese decorative elements of the shop houses were the Chinese-style front pitched façade roofs which gave way to the gable façade. In front of the shop houses a covered passageway of ca. five feet was constructed during the British period, which was subsequently named “the five foot way”. The inhabitants of the houses had the upper floors extended over the walkway or by blocking the entire walkway to create more private space. (Building Analysis on Jonkerstraat 2001:51) 14 Other Chinese decorative elements of shophouses are: a fire wall in the form of a “cat crawling”4, (Knapp 1986:41) square ventilation holes and an indoor screen. (Raja Nafida 2008:308) For these types of houses the materials used are: timber, mortar and terracotta. (Measured drawing Southwest Facade 2001:115) Figure 9a: Side-gable With “cat crawling” on Jalan Hang Jebat Source: Robert C.M. Weebers 6. Figure 9b: Air vents on Jalan Hang Jebat Source: Robert C.M. Weebers. Significance and Authenticity The shop houses in Melaka meet the requirement of authenticity as was decided at the first session of the World Heritage Committee in 1977. Paragraph 9: “In addition, the property should meet the test of authenticity in design, materials, workmanship and setting; authenticity does not limit consideration to original form and structure but includes all subsequent modifications and additions, over the course of time, which in themselves possess artistic or historical values.” (ICOMOS 2008:43) The requirements for significance according to Icomos (ICOMOS 2008:27) are that a property should “be an outstanding example of a type of building or architectural or technological ensemble or landscape which illustrates (a) significant stage(s) in human history”. These shophouses were built during periods where the Dutch and the English ruled over Melaka. Apparently Dutch influences were still noticeable during English times. Authentic and significant about the shophouses in Melaka are that these are two stories high with decorative elements like doors and windows in two halves. Materials used are the Dutch bricks: rectangular in size, quite light, not so high and 4 A cat crawling is a circular, rounded style roof 15 not very thick. The plaster on the walls the hardwood framing of the windows, wall anchors and hinges of doors and windows. The setting is in the historic city of Melaka. 7. Conclusion The findings of this paper are that the 37 shophouses in the “Dutch” style in Melaka which are not totally “Dutch” in design and decoration. Some have Dutch characteristics like the door and rectangular window in two halves. Others have the door in one piece with a rectangular window and a window, small or large, in the façade of the first floor. The width of the façade was introduced by the Dutch. Decorative elements of Dutch origin are beams, hinges, wall anchors, hardwood framing, louvered windows, tile roofing and terracotta floor tiles. Other Dutch influences are the plastering of the walls, the turning of the ridge parallel to the street so the façades are at the side of the house and the addition of galleries. Chinese architectural characteristics of the shop houses are the simple and very functional form. Chinese decorative elements are a fire wall (side gable) in the form of a “cat crawling”, square ventilation holes and an indoor screen. It can also be argued that the design of the façade is not after any “Dutch” design but that these kinds of facades are commonly found in the Southeast Asia region. As of the eighteenth century Portuguese influences are also seen in the shophouses in the gable endings. According to Incomes (ICOMOS 2008:27 a property should “be an outstanding example of a type of building or architectural or technological ensemble or landscape which illustrates (a) significant stage(s) in human history”. That is certainly the case with these 37 “Dutch” shophouses in Melaka. 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