Abstract

Abstract. Timor Island situates in the southeast end of Southeast Asia. The island accommodates many ethnic groups, which produce many diverse house types. As visiting East Timor in 2012 and Timor Island in 2014, we found the “Pair- House Type” widely spread over Timor Island. Uma Lulik (holy house), accommodating the ancestry soul, fireplace and elder’s bed, and Uma Tidor (house for sleep), containing living, sleeping and working space, compose the pair-house. The research team visited 14 ethnic groups and their houses, some of which were measured and drawn into 3D models as back to Taiwan. Uma Tidors of each ethnic group are quite similar with rectangular volume and hip roof, however, one of the fourteen ethnic groups can build cylinder houses for Uma Tidor. Uma Luliks of different ethnic groups are diversified and special. One group of the Uma Luliks shows a rectangular or square volume sheltered by a hip roof. The other group of Uma Luliks presents a non-specific volume under a conical roof, that we called the “conical hut”. Seven ethnic groups, Atoni, Weimua, Makassae, Mambai, Bunaq, Kemak and Bekais, have built “conical huts” for the use of Uma Lulik. People of the seven ethnic groups can construct a reasonable structural system to support the conical roof, and take good advantage of the space under the conical roof to meet their sacred needs and everyday life. “Conical Hut” may be regarded as the basic form of the house types adopted by the seven ethnic groups. It contains the basic spatial limits and the formal properties that the construction systems have to follow. Based on the concise rules of the basic form, people of each ethnic group use their talents, skills and building materials to generate variations of “conical hut”, which are different in house scale, spatial layout, construction system and form. The “conical huts” contain the consistency that all the huts come from the basic form, meanwhile, they also present the diversification that each conical hut has differed. “Consistent but diversified”, is one of the most interesting issues in typological study that we can observe in Timorese houses.

Highlights

  • Located at 124o56’ East longitude and 9o14’ South latitude, Timor is an island at the southern end of Maritime Southeast Asia, north of the Timor Sea

  • As visiting East Timor in 2012 and Timor Island in 2014, we found the “Pair- House Type” widely spread over Timor Island

  • This study focuses on the comparison and investigation of construction systems and spatial structures of Timor houses with conical roof

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Located at 124o56’ East longitude and 9o14’ South latitude, Timor is an island at the southern end of Maritime Southeast Asia, north of the Timor Sea. Japanese studies with house drawings in eastern Indonesian islands, including West Timor houses, can be found. It encompasses some ethnic group names, distribution, house plans, languages, living, and quantity of houses The Indonesian literature published by Universitas Widya Mandira in 1992, "ARSITEKTUR: PROTO MONGOLOID, NEGROID, AUSTROLOID," elaborated on the architecture of Atoni, an ethnic group in West Timor in elaborated details with sketched layout, plan, section, and detail drawings. The house construction systems in Timor Island can be divided into two types. Various spatial structures are derived from these two types of roofs, and Uma Lulik of different ethnic groups. This study focuses on the comparison and investigation of construction systems and spatial structures of Timor houses with conical roof

METHOD
Atoni’s Uma Lulik and Lopo Lopo
Weimua’s Uma Lulik
Makassae’s Uma Lulik
Mambai’s Uma Lulik
Kemak’s Uma Lulik
Bunaq’s Uma Lulik
Bekais’s Uma Lulik
Summary
CONCLUSIONS
Shared Rules of the Conical Huts
Variations of the Conical Huts
Limits of the Conical Huts
Full Text
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