Malay Mosque in Binjai City.

Hi, good evening, all Hive Friends in this community, healthy greetings to all of us. Because really health is the most expensive thing ever. Even though we are a family, we are in an unhealthy condition to be active because of the flu accompanied by fever, aching bones. prolonged period that hit, not only us but in my City many of the same diseases as us as if this were a plague. However, the flu in the rainy season which was prolonged and the weather often changed, high activity and vitamins that were no longer able to survive, finally the illness came too. Pray for me and my family that we will get well soon.



Even though the situation is not healthy, I will still share the beautiful architecture in my city. The architecture of the building that I will share is still a mosque with a Malay nuance. If you study history by just glancing at this building, you will already know that this building is very identical to the Malay ethnic group in Indonesia. The first thing that is striking about buildings with Malay traditions is the choice of paint color which is very common and they always use as a symbol of respect and prosperity, namely the color Yellow Paint with a Green List which is the accompanying color. This color looks very contrasting but goes well together.



This mosque has just been built and has not been given a name so I do not know the name of the mosque. Entering the gate of the mosque, we will be presented with a view of how beautiful the gate of the mosque is, with yellow mixed with green. And the roofs are arranged like trays with 3 layers, the higher the architecture the smaller the tray. Beside the trays that make up the rectangular building, we will see all the sides of the rectangle decorated with carvings of wood that point downward like stalactites on the ceiling of a cave dripping water from the gaps. In the middle of the top of the gate we will find a vent which I thought at first was a waste. However, after I observed it turned out that at the bottom of the gate there was a door which was for storage, so this was a small warehouse.



Entering the courtyard of the mosque, the first thing that catches my attention is the window which has a classic design with the selection of brown paint which adds a classic impression to the building, but when we look at the building as a whole, the values ​​of this building seem modern without forgetting their ancestral values. The floor of this mosque is made multilevel with the selection of granite, the wood motif that I see has number one quality, judging by the materials and brands that I already know. The roof of the mosque on the outside is made using PVC with a plain brown pattern which makes it look like wood, but if we enter the mosque and look at the ceiling, the flafon inside the mosque is made with cement made with a cloud pattern using design services then the walls around the flapon are reinforced with PVC which is brown like the one on the outside of the terrace, it seems the colors don't blend together but the jaid is getting cooler.. what do you think?



Satisfied with the design inside the mosque, we will discuss the roof of the mosque. The roof of the mosque, which is usually round in shape, was adapted from a combination of Middle Eastern countries, now the roof of this Malay mosque is in the form of a 4-storey terrace, the same as the one at the gate. This form is what Indonesians immediately know that this building is a Malay custom. What do you think of this building, as a whole you can judge for yourself from the photos that I share and let's share information about the design of this mosque, sometimes I know too little about the names of the designs or the interior of the room . Warm greetings to all of you.



Keep following our posts, OK, greetings from us Tomi and Maya from Binjai City, Indonesia.

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