Situated in old Surabaya, this stately Dutch colonial style compound was built in 1858 and is now a preserved as historical site. This building, was previously used as an orphanage that managed by the Dutch, it was purchased in 1932 by Liem Seeng Tee, the founder of Sampoerna, with the intent of it being used as Sampoerna's first major cigarette production facility. This complex consist of a wide central auditorium, two smaller buildings in east wing and occidental and some wide barns with one floor behind the central auditorium.

The buildings that stay in both auditorium wings is then turned into family house, whereas big barns looks like a warehouse exploited for tobacco and clove processing into marketed cigarette. Today, the compound is still functioning as a production plant for Indonesia's most prestigious cigarette, Dji Sam Soe. In commemoration of Sampoerna's 90th anniversary in 2003, the central complex has been painstakingly restored and is now open to public.