Abstract

The urban architectural heritages of Bandung represents the city’s historical layers. A unique urban architectural element found in Bandung is the heritage neighborhood marketplace. In the style of European post-renaissance urban design, a heritage neighborhood marketplace is initially designed as housing clusters with open spaces as neighborhood centre to create community privacy. But along the time, the neighborhood centre open their enclosed spaces and landmark buildings, transforming itself into small marketplaces with intensively daily activities. Through everyday place-making methods, this article investigates the history and meaning of neighborhood marketplace as everyday urban artefacts through observation, historical study, and interview. The study reveals are three main forces assembling the current form of neighborhood marketplaces in Bandung: Dutch-Indies colonialization, Chinese society trading network, and local traders’ tradition. Dutch-Indies colonialization in Bandung brought European architectural knowledge into neighborhood morphological design that contributed well-defined urban spaces. The Chinese trading network has been at place since the diaspora era and is still continued until now, bridging past and present life through economic activities. Local traders, who came after Dutch-Indies colonialization, fill the empty spaces of neighborhood centres with intensive formal and informal economic activities. Bandung heritage neighborhood marketplaces represent the city’s urban constellation, where global and local political-economic and socio-cultural forces meet in an urban process. Here, the urban heritage is redefined as living artefacts experienced in everyday urban life. Keywords: urban heritage, place making, neighborhood marketplace, Bandung, urban assemblage, living artefacts.

Full Text
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