Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
KAI Commuter Yogyakarta Line (also called KRL Commuterline Yogyakarta–Solo, [2] informally KRL Jogja–Solo, KRL Solo–Jogja [3] or KRL Joglo), officially the Yogyakarta Commuter Line, is a commuter rail system in Indonesia serving Greater Yogyakarta in Special Region of Yogyakarta and Greater Surakarta (Solo) in Central Java.
It runs through five of the six provinces on the island of Java (DI Yogyakarta being the sole exception), connecting the major cities of Jakarta, Cirebon, Semarang, Solo, and Surabaya. The toll road is the land transportation backbone of the island and is the most important toll road network of the country.
The realization of the Solo–Yogyakarta–YIA–Kulon Progo toll road is considered special because it connects two cultural cities. namely Surakarta and Yogyakarta. In addition, this project has received high attention from the central government and regional governments because it is considered very strategic as a solution for mobility and ...
Yogyakarta: Terminal station. Intercity trains KRL Commuterline Yogyakarta–Solo. Prambanan Ekspres. Trans Jogja: Line 1A, Line 2A, Teman Bus Godean Line (Mangkubumi 2) Line 1A, Line 2A, Line 3A, Line 8, Line 10 (Malioboro 1) Yogyakarta: Special Region of Yogyakarta: YA 02 P 05 JS 06: Wates: Intercity trains Prambanan Ekspres. Kulon Progo ...
The Jakarta-Bandung HSR began trial operation with passengers on 7 September 2023 and commercial operations on 2 October 2023. [81] Indonesia and Chinese authorities discussed further plans to extend the railway across the Java island, from Jakarta to Surabaya [82] [83] with estimates 3.5 hours from Jakarta to Surabaya. [84]
Initially, this station probably had four railway tracks with line 1 being a straight line. [5] Since the operation of the Yogyakarta-Solo partial double track as the Srowot-Ketandan segment in 2001 and completed as the Brambanan-Delanggu segment on 15 December 2003, line 2 of this station was made into as a straight line from Solo.
The hall of Semarang Tawang station when it was still managed by the NIS (c. 1910-1920).. In 1911, the Nederlandsch-Indische Spoorweg Maatschappij (NIS) began to draw up a master plan for the railway system on the Semarang–Surakarta–Yogyakarta railway line which was previously inaugurated in 1873.
Trans Jogja operates from 06:00 to 19:00 starting from 22 March 2020. [ 4 ] Trans Jogja is currently operated by PT Jogja Tugu Trans, a consortium of Perum DAMRI and public transport cooperatives in Special Region of Yogyakarta (Koperasi Pemuda Sleman, Kopata, Aspada, Kobutri, and Puskopkar), and PT Anindya Mitra Internasional, a province-owned ...