A large floating dry dock for the Dutch East Indies In 1900, there were three floating dry docks in the Dutch East Indies. The biggest was
Onrust Dock of 5,000 tons, stationed at
Surabaya. A relatively new dry dock at the time was
Tanjung Priok Dock of 4,000 tons at Tanjung Priok,
Batavia. The old
Onrust Dock of 3,000 tons was stationed at
Sabang at the western extremity of the archipelago. The two dry docks on
Java could service most ships visiting the island. They were capable of lifting all ships that the Dutch navy had, and it was thought that they would also be able to lift those which the navy would acquire in the foreseeable future. The
Onrust Dock of 5,000 tons had been commissioned and stationed at
Onrust Island in 1880. In 1883, the dock lifted of 5,400 tons displacement. In September 1884
Koning der Nederlanden was again reported in the dock. Soon after, the dock lifted the Russian armored cruisers of 5,683 tons, and, after unloading, of 6,234 tons. It had been proven that
Onrust Dock of 5,000 tons could handle all Dutch warships and even some bigger ships. In 1886 the dry dock was rebased to
Surabaya. When, in 1903, the new of 5,002 tons displacement arrived,
Onrust Dock of 5,000 tons proved unable to lift the ship. Although it was known that the official capacity of the dry dock had gone back from 4,800 tons to 4,500 tons, in view of the above this was still a surprising event. Meanwhile, there were plans for a new dry dock of 7,000 tons. After consultations between the ministries for the navy and the colonies, a commission for dry dock facilities in the Indies was appointed in January 1904. Members where: the retired VA N. Mac Leod, the retired chief engineer Siebers of the Marine establishment in Surabaya, Mr. W. Fenenga of the
Amsterdamsche Droogdok Maatschappij, Navy shipbuilding engineer Van Veen, and as secretary Lieutenant Schoonhoven. This commission made a report in late 1904. In December 1904, a Dutch M.P. asked the minister for the navy about a new dry dock for Surabaya. He stated the cost of docking in Singapore, and the need for independence in this respect, but nothing much happened. In 1903, the Droogdok Maatschappij Tandjong Priok in Batavia was extremely busy. Its commercial
Tanjung Priok Dock of 4,000 tons had so much work, that some of the maintenance had to be postponed. In 1905 the company got permission to erect a
patent slip that could serve vessels of up to 2,000 tons displacement, which was big enough for most vessels which regularly docked at Batavia.
The port of Port of Tanjung Perak in Surabaya Surabaya was the commercial center of Java, with good connections to the interior. In the nineteenth century, this had led to the establishment of the main Dutch navy base of the Dutch East Indies at Surabaya. Meanwhile, the harbor of Surabaya was nothing more than a place to safely anchor offshore. This meant that goods had to be transloaded to ships via boats, considerably raising the cost of calling at Surabaya. In about 1909, the Dutch government therefore started the construction of a modern port known as the
Port of Tanjung Perak (Dutch: Tandjong Perak). On 22 September 1910. the
Droogdok Maatschappij Soerabaja (DMS) was established to manage a dry dock facility at Surabaya. It ordered
Surabaya Dock of 3,500 tons, which would arrive in 1912.
A large dual-use dry dock On 1 January 1910,
Onrust Dock of 5,000 tons was still the largest dry dock in the Dutch East Indies. Under normal circumstances, it would not be large enough to lift the
armored cruiser , which had been launched on 15 March 1909. However, as
De Zeven Provinciën displaced 6,530 tons, being too large for
Onrust Dock of 5,000 tons, did not mean that she required a dry dock of 14,000 tons, i.e. more than twice the size required to lift her. There had been ideas to acquire ships that were slightly larger, but these did not even make it to the design phase. Later
plans for battleships would have led to ships which would have been too wide and high for the 14,000 tons dry dock. In effect the explanation for the size of the dry dock is straightforward. In June 1910, the -long
ocean liner Prinses Juliana of , and 12,190 ton displacement was launched. She was the biggest ship built in the Netherlands up to then. She was also a ship of the
Netherland Line, the main shipping line between the Netherlands and the Dutch East Indies. She was soon followed by a sister ship,
Koningin der Nederlanden. The Dutch government could not ignore the appearance of these large ships. If these ships could not rely on a suitable repair facility in the Dutch East Indies, their owners might prefer to use the alternative in Singapore. In summary:
Surabaya Dock of 14,000 tons was a dry dock meant for use by the navy and merchant shipping. In the end the size of commercial ships was decisive for the size of the new Surabaya dry dock. That it became so large was caused by the plans becoming mixed up with those for the port of Surabaya. In 1903, the new dry dock would become a 7,000 tons dry dock. In 1907 there was talk about dredging the approaches to Surabaya, and the capacity of the dry dock having to become larger than was previously thought. In November 1910, the Minister for the Colonies
Jan Hendrik de Waal Malefijt presented a design for a dry dock of 120 m long and 12,000 tons lift capacity, but by then M.P.'s wanted a larger dock, because the ships of the Nederland Line and others were larger (see
Prinses Juliana above). In December 1910, Minister de Waal Malefijt then appointed a commission that was to decide on the type and size of the dry dock. The East Indies would meanwhile have to make plans for the mooring place (Navy base or new port of Surabaya) and the management of the dry dock. If the commission would advice something much more expensive than was envisioned up to then, the minister would get back to the House of Representatives. The commission consisted of: Mr. de Jongh, ex-director of the Public works of Rotterdam (chair); jhr Op ten Noort, member of the board of the
Nederland Line; D. Goekoop, chairman of the society of the Dutch shipbuilding industry; Mr. Kloos, chief engineer of
Nederlandsche Fabriek van Werktuigen en Spoorwegmaterieel; Fenenga, manager of
Amsterdamsche Droogdok Maatschappij; Mr. C. Nobel, manager of Rotterdam Public Works, and future manager of Tanjung Perak; Lt-Captain Umbgrove; and Mr. van Beek, chief-engineer and director of navy ship construction. Meanwhile 500,000 guilders for the dry dock were put on the 1911 budget for the Dutch East Indies. == Construction and characteristics ==