Home

  Editors

  Ethics

  Submission

  Volumes

  Indexing

  Copyright

  Fees

  Subscription

  Publisher

  Support

  EPPM

Journal of Engineering, Project, and Production Management, 2014, 4(2), 60-73

 

Local Cultural Heritage Sites and Spatial Planning for the Bantik Ethnic Community in Indonesia

 

P. P. Egam1 and N. Mishima2

1Doctoral Candidate, Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Saga University, 1, Honjou-Machi, Saga City, 840-8502, Japan, Lecturer at Sam Ratulangi University, Indonesia, E-mail: epingkan@yahoo.com (corresponding author).

2Professor, Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Saga University, 1, Honjou-Machi, Saga City, 840-8502, Japan, E-mail: mishiman@cc.saga-u.ac.jp

 

Engineering Management

 

Received February 5, 2014; received revision April 6, 2014; accepted April 7, 2014

 

Available online May 10, 2014

 

Abstract: The course of a city’s development has an effect on both spatial and social aspects, and this situation affects ethnic communities. As a result of recent urban developments, the cultural values of a community that are embedded in living arrangements have been disturbed, thus obscuring, or even hiding, the rich cultural heritage therein. The purpose of this paper is to analyze the spatial characteristics of local neighborhoods based on a wealth of cultural heritage objects. This research focuses on the physical cultural heritage of the Bantik settlement in Malalayang. The spatial characteristics of cultural heritage objects are analyzed, based on physical and other characteristics. The results indicate that, although the Bantik ethnic community in Malalayang, Indonesia, has physical cultural heritage sites, it is unable to effectively develop these as significant cultural spaces because of the physical separation of their locations, the declining meaning of these sites to the community, and the lack of support from indigenous organizations. Distance is not the only determinant of the optimization of cultural space. Planning for cultural spaces involves three zones: 1) a promotion zone, 2) a core zone, and 3) a buffer zone. The greatest potential for developing a cultural space is in the vicinity of Minanga Road and the Niopo Stone, with the physical object reinforcement of similar sites. To improve cultural space, it is not enough to only rely on the existence of a physical object, it is necessary to create a close relationship between the object and the community with the support of indigenous organizations.

 

Keywords: Distance, cultural space, physical cultural heritage, spatial planning, Bantik ethnic community.

Copyright © Journal of Engineering, Project, and Production Management (EPPM-Journal).

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 Unported License.

Requests for reprints and permissions at eppm.journal@gmail.com.

Citation: Egam, P. P. and Mishima, N. (2014). Local Cultural Heritage Sites and Spatial Planning for the Bantik Ethnic Community in Indonesia. Journal of Engineering, Project, and Production Management, 4(2), 60-73.

DOI: 10.32738/JEPPM.201407.0002

Full text

 


Copyright © EPPM-Journal. All rights reserved.