Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Warakas is administrative village (kelurahan in Indonesian) at Tanjung Priok subdistrict, North Jakarta. The border of Papanggo are : Tanjung Priok administrative village in the north; Papanggo administrative village in the west and in the south; Sungai Bambu administrative village in the east; The zip code of this administrative village is 14340.
Papanggo is one of seven administrative villages (kelurahan in Indonesian) in Tanjung Priok district, North Jakarta. The borders of Papanggo are: Warakas administrative village in the north; Sungai Bambu administrative village in the west; Sunter Agung administrative village in the east and in the south; The zip code of this administrative ...
The provinces of Banten and West Java (except those parts within the Jakarta metropolitan area [3]). 5 The province of Central Java and the Yogyakarta Special Region. 6 The province of East Java. 7 Kalimantan (the Indonesian part of Borneo island). 8 The provinces of Bali, West Nusa Tenggara and East Nusa Tenggara (the Lesser Sunda Islands). 9
The Cililitan-Tanjung Priok Road (Indonesian: Jalan Raya Cililitan-Tanjung Priok), also known as the Jakarta Bypass (old spelling: Djakarta Bypass) or simply Bypass, is a 27 km (17 mile) long bypass road in Jakarta, Indonesia that connects the Dewi Sartika Road and the Bogor Main Road (Jalan Raya Bogor, which is one of the sections of the Great Post Road/Jalan Raya Pos) in Cililitan, East ...
The Special Capital Region of Jakarta in Indonesia is divided into 5 administrative cities and one regency, which in turn are divided into districts (Indonesian: kecamatan), and subsequently subdistricts (Indonesian: kelurahan). In total, there are 44 districts and 267 subdistricts in Jakarta, a number that has remained constant since the most ...
North Jakarta, an area at the estuary of Ciliwung river was the main port for the kingdom of Tarumanegara, which later grew to become Jakarta. Many historic sites and artefacts of Jakarta can be found in North Jakarta. Both ports of Tanjung Priok and historic Sunda Kelapa are located in the city.
Tanjung Priok was the site of a widely publicized incident on September 12, 1984, when army forces fired on a group of Muslim protesters. The protesters were demonstrating against proposed government regulations that would require all formal organisations in the country to adopt Pancasila as their ideology.
It connects the Tanjung Priok bus terminal in North Jakarta to the Pusat Grosir Cililitan (PGC) mall in East Jakarta. The streets traversed by Corridor 10 are along Enggano, Yos Sudarso, Jenderal Ahmad Yani , Mayjen DI Panjaitan and Mayjen Sutoyo streets (the latter four are parts of the Jakarta Bypass ).