Lawang Sewu is a landmark in Semarang,
Central Java, Indonesia.
The name Lawang Sewu is from Javanese; it
means "Thousand Doors". The name comes from its design, with numerous
doors and arcs.
Layout
The complex consists of several buildings,
two main ones named A and B and two smaller ones named C and D, on Pemuda
Street. The l-shaped A building faces the Tugu Muda roundabout. There are two
identical towers on A building, which were originally used to store water, each
with a capacity of 7,000 litres (1,800 US gal). The building features large
stained-glass windows and a grand staircase in the center. There was also once
an underground tunnel connecting A building to several other sites in the city,
including the governor's mansion and the harbour.
The B building is located behind A building.
It is three stories in height, with the first two floors consisting of offices
and the third holding a ballroom.The building, with high, large windows, also
has a basement floor that is kept partially flooded to serve to cool the
building through evaporation.
In front of A building stands a monument to
five employees killed during the Indonesian War of Independence.
History
A building in the early 1900s
Lawang Sewu was designed by C. Citroen, from
the firm of J.F. Klinkhamer and B.J. Quendag. Construction began in 1904 with A
building, which was completed in 1907. The rest of the complex was finished in
1919. It was initially used by the Nederlandsch Indische Spoorweg Maatschappij,
the national railway of the Dutch East Indies.
After the Japanese invaded Indonesia in 1942,
the Japanese army took over Lawang Sewu. The basement of B building was turned
into a prison, with several executions taking place there. When Semarang was
retaken by the Dutch in the battle of Semarang in October 1945, the Dutch
forces used the tunnel leading into A building to sneak into the city. A battle
ensued, with numerous Indonesian fighters dying. Five employees working there
were also killed.
After the war, the Indonesian army took over
the complex. It was later returned to the national railway company.
By 2009 the Lawang Sewu complex was in a
state of considerable dilapidation. Simon Marcus Gower, writing in The Jakarta
Post, noted it as being "dark and evidently sick. Its white walls are
faded throughout; blackened by pollution and neglect. Rendered walls are
cracked and any wall paper has long since fallen away to reveal the red bricks
beneath. Mould and weeds grow over much of the building and mice and rats are
the chief residents."
The building soon underwent renovations to
ensure that it would be profitable as a tourist attraction. Governor of Central
Java Bibit Waluyo mobilized several dozen soldiers to assist with the renovations;
the soldiers focused on external repairs. Local residents were disappointed in
the renovations, opining that it had lost its authenticity.
On 5 July 2011 the newly renovated complex
was inaugurated by First Lady Ani Yudhoyono. However, at the time only B building
was available for tours. It is hoped to be a main attraction in the Central
Javan Government's tourism program in 2013.
Haunting
The basement of B building, said to be
haunted by a kuntilanak
Lawang Sewu is said to be haunted, with many
tourists visiting to see the ghosts. Among the ghosts reported to inhabit the
establishment are a Dutchwoman who committed suicide inside and "headless
ghouls".
In 2007, a horror film entitled Lawang Sewu:
Dendam Kuntilanak (Lawang Sewu: Kuntilanak's Vengeance) was released based on
the legend. It told the story of a group of high school students from Jakarta
who were trapped in Lawang Sewu after several had to urinate and featured
ghosts of a Dutchwoman, a man with a ball and chain wrapped around his leg, and
a kuntilanak.
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