A pendhapa or pandhapa (Javanese: ꦥꦼꦤ꧀ꦝꦥ or ꦥꦤ꧀ꦝꦥ, Indonesian spelling: pendapa, nonstandard spelling: pendopo or pěndåpå) is a fundamental element of architecture unique in the southern central part of Java; A Study of Traditional House of Northern Central Java - A Case Study of Demak and Jepara - by Totok Roesmanto a large pavilion-like structure built on . Either square or rectangular in Floor plan, it is open on all sides and provides shelter from the sun and rain, but allows breeze and indirect light. The word pendhapa is cognate to the Sanskrit word mandapa ("hall").
The Dutch people writer, Multatuli, in his colonial reformist novel, Max Havelaar, described the pendhapa thus: "After a broad-brimmed hat, an umbrella, or a hollow tree, a 'pendoppo' sic is certainly the most simple representation of the idea 'roof'."Multatuli. Max Havelaar (1860), translated by Alphonse Nahuÿs. Chapter 5. (Google Books)
Derived from ancient Javanese architectural elements, pendhapa are common ritual spaces primarily intended for ceremonies and also for purposes such as receiving guests in the compounds of wealthy Javanese and even as cottage industry work spaces. Pendhapa is constructed as a stand-alone structure or, attached to a walled inner structure ( dalem), may form the front part of a traditional Javanese house ( omah).
They remain fundamental components of Javanese kraton ('palaces'), with European influences often being incorporated since the 18th century. The majority of pendhapa are constructed from timber but stonemasonry versions are in existence such as in the Kraton Kanoman in Cirebon. Wealthy modern day home builders, in attempting to design homes that draw on traditional Javanese experience of space, have dismantled, transported and re-assembled pendhapa to form modern-traditional hybrid homes. The pendhapa is used as a batik making place for women. Dynamic Usage of Space in the Javanese Architecture Year 1921-2007 by Mohamad MUQOFFA
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