Jabotabek (or Jabodetabek, Greater Jakarta) is an officially recognized definition and term given to the urban region surrounding Jakarta, Indonesia in 2000, officially including five municipalities and three regencies.[1] The population of Jabotabek in the Indonesia 2000 census by the Indonesian government was officially counted to be 23.3 million,[1] and 28.0 million from the Indonesian Census 2010.[2]
The area straddles DKI Jakarta and parts of the provinces of West Java and Banten, specifically the three Regencies of those provinces which surround Jakarta - Bekasi and Bogor in West Java, and Tangerang in Banten. Also included are the Kota (formerly Kotamadya) independent municipalities of Bogor, Depok, Bekasi, Tangerang and (since October 2008) South Tangerang.
The name of the region is taken from the first two or three letters of each city's name: Jabo(de)tabek from Jakarta, Bogor, (Depok), Tangerang and Bekasi.
It is important to note that Greater Jakarta's sprawl does not end at the Jabodetabek boundary. For area comparison, Jabodetabek covers an area only half the size of Los Angeles County. Greater Jakarta continues to grow, and has long since spilled into the regencies of Karawang, Purwakarta, Sukabumi, and Cianjur of West Java as well as Serang Regency of Banten. However, of these, only Karawang and Serang have densities exceeding 1,000 people per square kilometer. The sum total of Jabodetabek, Serang Regency, Municipality, and Cilegon as well as Karawang Regency is 32.65 million as of the most recent decennial census. In addition, Greater Bandung's suburbs are a mere 30 kilometers from Jabodetabek's boundaries.
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Among the inhabitants, approximately 9.58 million live in Jakarta in 2010; almost 8.2 million in the five cities of Bogor, Depok, Bekasi, Tangerang, and South Tangerang; and almost 10.2 million in the three regencies (Bekasi Regency, Tangerang Regency, and Bogor Regency). The population is steadily increasing due to migration from all over Indonesia.
Common names for Greater Jakarta:
Administrative division | Area (km²)[3] | Population (2010 Census Final)[3]) | Population density (/km²) |
---|---|---|---|
DKI Jakarta | 664 | 9,588,198 | 14,464 |
Bogor Municipality, W.J. | 109 | 952,406 | 8,737 |
Bekasi Municipality, W.J. | 210 | 2,378,211 | 9,905 |
Tangerang Municipality, B. | 164 | 1,797,715 | 9,342 |
South Tangerang Municipality, B. | 151 | 1,303,569 | 8,646 |
Bogor Regency, W.J. | 2,664 | 4,779,578 | 1,791 |
Tangerang Regency, B. | 960 | 2,838,621 | 2,958 |
Bekasi Regency, W.J. | 1,270 | 2,629,551 | 2,071 |
Depok Municipality, W.J. | 200 | 1,751,696 | 7,053 |
Jabodetabek Region | 6,392 | 28,019,545 | 4,383.53 |
W.J. = West Java province B. = Banten province
Source: Central Bureau of Statistics provincial data
The region is partly defined by the areas from which people commute into the city.
Jabotabek is served by commuter train known as Jabotabek electric train (KRL Jabotabek) with four line rail road.
The region is served by six major bus terminals, connected innercity and intercity :
Bus stations | Location | City/Regency |
---|---|---|
Pulo Gadung | Pulo Gadung | East Jakarta |
Kampung Rambutan | Pasar Rebo | East Jakarta |
Lebak Bulus | Cilandak | South Jakarta |
Blok M | Kebayoran Baru | South Jakarta |
Tanjung Priok | Tanjung Priok | North Jakarta |
Grogol | Grogol Petamburan | West Jakarta |
Rawamangun | Pulo Gadung | East Jakarta |
Kampung Melayu | Jatinegara | East Jakarta |
Senen | Senen | Central Jakarta |
Pasar Minggu | Pasar Minggu | South Jakarta |
Manggarai | Tebet | South Jakarta |
Klender | Duren Sawit | East Jakarta |
Baranangsiang | Central Bogor | Bogor City |
Depok | Pancoran Mas | Depok City |
Bekasi | Sepanjang Jaya | Bekasi City |
Cimone | Cimone | Tangerang City |
Cikarang | Cikarang | Bekasi Regency |
Ciputat | Ciputat | South Tangerang City |
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