
Plataran Heritage Borobudur
A Javanese rice terrace facing the 9th-century Borobudur sunrise
About the Property
Plataran Heritage Borobudur occupies a hillside rice terrace overlooking the UNESCO World Heritage Borobudur temple complex, with unobstructed sunrise views of the 9th-century Buddhist monument and the surrounding Kedu Plain volcanoes. The resort is composed entirely of authentic Javanese joglo houses — traditional teak timber-frame structures salvaged and relocated from across Central Java — furnished with batik textiles, wayang puppets, and heirloom Javanese ceramics. It is the rare property where the architecture, landscape, and proximity to a world-class heritage site create a genuinely transcendent cultural experience.
Original Purpose
Purpose-built Javanese heritage resort
Highlights
History Timeline
The Borobudur temple complex, located on the plain below the future resort site, is completed under the Sailendra dynasty — one of the greatest Buddhist monuments ever constructed.
British Lieutenant Governor Thomas Stamford Raffles orders the excavation and documentation of Borobudur, bringing the long-overgrown temple to the world's attention.
UNESCO inscribes Borobudur on the World Heritage List, establishing the protected buffer zone within which the future resort would be built.
Traditional Javanese joglo pavilions sourced from villages across Central Java are dismantled and transported to the hillside rice terrace site for restoration.
Plataran Heritage Borobudur opens, presenting a collection of authentic joglo houses set within working rice paddies with direct views of the temple pyramid.
Named Indonesia's Leading Heritage Resort at the World Travel Awards, recognizing the model of salvage-and-restore Javanese architecture.