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The proportion of the core city's (Jakarta) population to that of the entire metropolitan area also declined significantly. In 2020, the population of Jakarta was only 30.4% of the total population of the Jakarta metropolitan area, continuing the decline from 54.6% in 1990 to 43.2% in 2000 and 35.5% in 2010.
Kota Kasablanka; Kalibata City Square; Kuningan City; Lippo Mall Kemang; Lippo Mall Nusantara; Lotte Shopping Avenue; Mal Ambasador; One Belpark; Pacific Place; Plaza Festival; Plaza Kalibata; Poins Square; Pondok Indah Mall; Setiabudi One; The Dharmawangsa Square; The Park Pejaten; ÆON Mall Tanjung Barat; Metro Mall Cipulir
Studies conducted by the Jakarta Post reveal that it is the fifth most popular fast food chain in Indonesia after Restoran Sederhana, KFC, McDonald's, and Pizza Hut. [6] As the Westernization of Indonesia took off in the 1990s, California Fried Chicken took advantage of the growth of American-style malls in the country, reaching 90 locations by ...
Cafe Batavia is a restaurant located in Kota Tua (Old Town), Jakarta, Indonesia.It is one of the colonial landmarks facing the square Taman Fatahillah.The building where Cafe Batavia is established is the second oldest building in the square, second only to the former City Hall building of Batavia, which had been reestablished as the Jakarta History Museum.
Jakarta Kota Station is a two-storey station surrounded by streets on three sides with one main entrance and two side entrances. The main entrance and hall are characterized by a barrel vault roof with openings horizontally composed with the top dominated by vertical units (lunettes).
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There are two possible origins of the name 'Depok'. The first is that it the region was already known as Depok when the land was bought by Cornelis Chastelein, a senior official in the Dutch East India Company in 1696 and that on 18 May 1696, a former VOC officer Cornelis Chastelein bought land with an area of 12.44 km 2, 6.2% the area of today's Depok.