megacity, Jakarta, city and urban planning
Planning the Megacity: Jakarta in the Twentieth Century
Planning the Megacity examines the dramatic transformation of Jakarta over the past century. In 1900, the colonial capital of the Netherland Indies, then known as Batavia, was a compact city of approximately 150,000 inhabitants. During the next hundred years, but especially after 1950, it was transformed into the sprawling ‘megacity’ of more than 9 million in an urbanized region that boasted
nearly 18 million by 2000. How this metamorphosis took place and what it meant for the life of Jakartans are questions central to the story of the city as is the role of both local and national leaders in the control and manipulation of the processes of growth. As Christopher Silver reveals, Jakarta’s place as Indonesia’s most prestigious city and its capital city subjected it to conflicting
approaches to planning, and placed its development within the vortex of national development. He reveals how colonialism, the struggle for independence and for improving the national condition, together with aspirations for economic modernization, contributed to the distinctive character of Southeast Asia’s largest metropolitan area.
Contents
Introduction
1. Understanding Urganization and the Megacity in Southeast Asia
1. Understanding Urganization and the Megacity in Southeast Asia
2. Fashioning the Colonial Capital City, 1900-1940
3. Plans for the Modern Metropolis, 1950s-1970s
4. Planning for Housing, Neighbourhoods and Urban Revitalization
5. Expansion, Revitalization and the Restructuring of Metropolitan Jakarta, the 1970s to the early 190s
6. Urban Village to World City: Re-planning Jakarta in the 1990s
7. Planning in the New Democratic Megacity