Five sides. Two centuries. Banda’s most photographed monument.
Fort Belgica is the centerpiece of any Banda Neira visit. Here’s the walking tour.

Fort Belgica was built in 1611 by the Dutch East India Company on the highest point overlooking Banda Neira harbor. Pentagonal, two-story, originally garrisoned by 50-80 soldiers. It was the administrative center of the Banda nutmeg monopoly for two centuries.
The building was extensively restored in 1991 by the Indonesian government. Today it functions as a heritage museum and free public space. The walking route below takes 90 minutes and covers what matters.
Stop 1: Approach + outer wall (15 min)
Walk up the cobbled path from the harbor — about 8 minutes from the dock. The fort sits 40m above sea level. Pause at the gate to read the small bilingual signboard giving the construction history. Note the masonry: locally-quarried volcanic stone bound with lime mortar that included crushed coral.
Stop 2: Inner courtyard (20 min)
Step through the main gate into the central courtyard. The five bastions — one at each corner of the pentagon — held the cannons. Look for the 17-century stone ovens used by the garrison cooks; the largest is in the southwest corner, signed “DAPUR”.
Climb the stairs to the upper level. The ramparts walk gives a continuous loop along all five bastions, with views in different directions: Mt. Api volcano, the harbor, Banda Besar, the open Banda Sea.
Stop 3: The northeast bastion + cannons (20 min)
The northeast bastion is the most photographed corner. Three original cannons remain in place, pointing toward the harbor entrance. Each weighs roughly 2 tonnes; the carriage wood is replaced periodically but the iron barrels date to the early 1700s.
From this bastion you can clearly see Pulau Run on the western horizon, ~30 km away. The 1667 Treaty of Breda made that island Dutch in exchange for Manhattan. From here it looks small.
Stop 4: Indoor museum (25 min)
Inside the central building (formerly the garrison commander’s quarters), a small museum displays:
— Original VOC company seal and trading documents (under glass)
— Maps showing the trading routes circa 1650
— Examples of nutmeg + mace processing equipment
— Photographs of pre-restoration ruin (1980s) for contrast
Captions in Indonesian and Dutch. Our historian provides English commentary.
Stop 5: Sjahrir house + descent (10 min)
Exit through the main gate, take the path that leads down through the back of the fort. Within 5 minutes you’ll reach the Sjahrir House — a colonial-era residence where the Indonesian socialist intellectual Sutan Sjahrir was exiled in the 1930s. Sjahrir later became Indonesia’s first prime minister. The house is now a small museum, opens 09:00-12:00 most days.
Practical notes
Open 08:00-17:30 daily. Entry free. No photography restrictions. Wear sturdy shoes (cobbled paths are uneven). Bring water — the rampart walk is exposed in midday sun. Toilets at the entrance only.
Walk the fort with us
Our day-3 visit to Banda Neira includes a 2-hour Fort Belgica tour with our historian. Indoor lecture afterward, dinner with the Wattimena family in the evening.