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The Phoenix Hotel
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The Phoenix Hotel

Yogyakarta's 1918 Art Deco landmark, minutes from the Kraton royal palace

🇮🇩 Yogyakarta, Indonesia·Est. 1918·Art Deco / Dutch Colonial·$$
74 HHI Distinguished
Heritage Distinguished

Transparency

Why This Score

How each of the nine Heritage Hotel Index dimensions was evaluated.

Heritage & Authenticity

40% of HHI
75.8/100
Historical Significance74.0
15%

Review pending

Architectural Integrity76.0
15%

Review pending

Cultural Immersion78.0
10%

Review pending

Guest Experience

35% of HHI
73.3/100
Authentic Experience74.0
15%

Review pending

Reputation Score72.0
12%

Review pending

Service Quality74.0
8%

Review pending

Operational Excellence

25% of HHI
72.8/100
Conservation Commitment70.0
10%

Review pending

Modern Comforts76.0
8%

Review pending

Value Positioning73.0
7%

Review pending

About the Property

The Phoenix has anchored central Yogyakarta since 1918, its original Art Deco facade a landmark on Jalan Jenderal Sudirman just minutes from the Kraton royal palace. Now operating as an MGallery property, the hotel has preserved its distinctive stepped colonial parapet and high-ceilinged public rooms while upgrading guest facilities for modern travellers. Its position in the cultural capital of Java — gateway to Borobudur, Prambanan, and living batik and wayang traditions — gives it a heritage significance that transcends its architecture.

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Original Purpose

Dutch colonial hotel

Highlights

Original 1918 Art Deco facade and stepped colonial parapet preservedWalking distance to the Kraton, Yogyakarta's living royal palaceCentral location between Borobudur and Prambanan temple complexesHigh-ceilinged colonial ballroom used for Javanese cultural eventsMGallery brand with period-inspired interiors throughoutSurrounded by Yogyakarta's renowned batik, silver, and wayang craft workshops

History Timeline

1918

Constructed on Jalan Jenderal Sudirman in central Yogyakarta, its Art Deco facade and wide colonnaded verandah immediately established it as the city's foremost colonial hotel.

1942

Occupied by Japanese military command during the Pacific War; Yogyakarta becomes a key staging point for Japanese administration of Java.

1946

Yogyakarta briefly serves as the capital of the Indonesian Republic during the independence struggle; the hotel hosts foreign correspondents and diplomatic delegations.

1949

Dutch forces withdraw following the Round Table Conference; the hotel returns to civilian use as Yogyakarta is reaffirmed as Indonesia's cultural capital.

2008

Major restoration and expansion undertaken, sensitively integrating modern guest facilities while preserving the original 1918 Art Deco street frontage.

2012

Joins the MGallery Collection by Accor, receiving international distribution while maintaining its landmark heritage character in central Yogyakarta.