Eisspeedway

North–South Line (Jakarta MRT)

North–South Line
Overview
Native nameLin Utara–Selatan
StatusOperational (Phase 1)
Under Construction (Phase 2A)
Planned (Phase 2B)
Owner Jakarta MRT
LocaleJakarta, Indonesia
Termini
Stations22 (13 operational, 7 under construction, 2 planned)
Service
TypeRapid transit
SystemJakarta MRT
Services1
Operator(s) Jakarta MRT
Depot(s)Lebak Bulus
Ancol Barat (future)
Rolling stock16 six-car MRTJ 1000 series trainsets
History
Commenced10 October 2013; 11 years ago (2013-10-10)
Planned opening2028 (Phase 2A)
2032 (Phase 2B)
Opened24 March 2019; 5 years ago (2019-03-24) (Phase 1)
Technical
Line length15.7 km (9.8 mi)
CharacterElevated
Underground
Track gauge1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
Electrification1,500 V DC overhead catenary
Operating speedlimit of 100 km/h (62 mph)
Route map

 
 
Ancol Barat Depot
Ancol
Jakarta Inner Ring Road
Mangga Dua
↑ Phase 2B
Kota
List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 List of TransJakarta corridors#Corridor 12
Glodok
List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1
Mangga Besar
List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1
Sawah Besar
List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1
Harmoni
List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 2 List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 3
↑ Phase 2A II: opening 2029
Monas List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 2 List of Transjakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes List of Transjakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes
Thamrin
List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1
↑ Phase 2A I: opening 2028
BHI
Bundaran HI Bank DKI
List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1
DKA
Dukuh Atas BNI
List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 4 List of TransJakarta corridors#Corridor 6
BNI City Sudirman
West Flood Canal
Dukuh Atas
STB
Setiabudi Astra
List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1
BNH
Bendungan Hilir
List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 List of TransJakarta corridors#Corridor 9
Jakarta Inner Ring Road
IST
Istora Mandiri
List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1
SNY
Senayan Mastercard
List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1
SSM
ASEAN
List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 List of TransJakarta corridors#Corridor 13
BLM
Blok M BCA
List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 Bus interchange
BLA
Blok A
HJN
Haji Nawi
CPR
Cipete Raya
Jakarta Outer Ring Road
FTM
Fatmawati Indomaret
LBB
Lebak Bulus Grab
List of TransJakarta corridors#Corridor 8 Bus interchange
Lebak Bulus Depot

The North–South line is a rapid transit line of the Jakarta MRT. Coloured dark red on the map, the line is currently 15.7 km (9.8 mi) long and serves 13 stations. It is the first and only operational line of the Jakarta MRT. The line is the second rail transit system to be operated in the country, after Palembang LRT.

History

Planning

The origins of the line and its development came in 1995, when the provincial government set up an idea to build the MRT system (subway), A giant Japanese company, Itochu, was certainly a candidate for the tender. Three months later, when then Governor of DKI Jakarta (at that time), Soerjadi Soedirdja, announced the formation of a consortium to build the system.[1][2] In the same year, an international consortium was formed to prepare a feasibility study for the first line of the MRT system and the consortium was named Indonesian Japanese European Group (IJEG).[3] The plan would have involved a 14 km route between Blok M and Jakarta Kota Station, fully built underground.[1]

The following year, the wide and comfortable pedestrian paths in Singapore were related to the construction of subway stations and this was planned to be completed and operational in 2000. Unfortunately, in 1998, it never happened due to the 1998 riots.[2]

Development

The development of the first line began when then President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono designated the system as a national project. On 28 November 2006, the first loan agreement was signed with the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA, then Japan Bank for International Cooperation or JBIC) for the project. The agreement included study funding and construction work funding for the first line of the system.[4][5][6]

Jakarta MRT underground section between Dukuh Atas station and Bundaran HI, in March 2018

Phase 1

A total of eight contracts were awarded.

  • CP 101 (Construction of Lebak Bulus Depot, Lebak Bulus station and related elevated works) awarded to Tokyu Corporation - Wijaya Karya consortium.
  • CP 102 (Construction of Cipete Raya and Fatmawati stations and related elevated works) awarded to Tokyu Corporation - Wijaya Karya consortium.
  • CP 103 (Construction of Haji Nawi, Blok A, Block M and ASEAN stations and related elevated works) awarded to Obayashi Corporation - Shimizu Corporation - PT Jaya Konstruksi JV.
  • CP 104 (Construction of Senayan and Istora stations and related tunnelling works) awarded to Shimizu Corporation - Obayashi Corporation - PT Wijaya Karya - PT Jaya Konstruksi JV.
  • CP 105 (Construction of Bendungan Hilir and Senayan stations and related tunnelling works) awarded to Shimizu Corporation - Obayashi Corporation - PT Wijaya Karya - PT Jaya Konstruksi JV.
  • CP 106 (Construction of Dukuh Atas and Bundaran HI stations and related tunnelling works) awarded to Sumitomo Mitsui Construction - PT Hutama Karya consortium.
  • CP 107 (Construction of railway systems and trackworks) awarded to Metro One consortium (namely Mitsui & Co.Toyo Engineering CorporationKobe Steel, Ltd – Inti Karya Persada Tehnik).
  • CP 108 (Construction of rolling stock) awarded to Sumitomo Corporation - Nippon Sharyo consortium.

On 1 June 2013, the first three civil contracts for the 9.2 km (5.7 mi) underground section were signed. Three civil engineering contracts for the elevated section were signed in the third quarter of 2013. Construction work began in October 2013.[7]

Tunnelling was completed on 23 February 2017, meeting the target completion date.[8] By October 2017, the construction of both elevated and underground line sections were completed.[9]

Ahead of its official opening, a limited public trial run was conducted from 12 March 2019 to 23 March 2019. The official opening ceremony was held on 24 March 2019 by President Joko Widodo.[10][11]

Phase 2

A total of eight contracts were put up.

  • CP 200 (Construction of underground electrical substation near Monas station) awarded to PT Trocon Indah Perkasa.
  • CP 201 (Construction of Thamrin and Monas stations and related tunnelling works) awarded to Shimizu Corporation - PT Adhi Karya JV.
  • CP 202 (Construction of Harmoni, Sawah Besar and Mangga Besar stations and related tunnelling works) awarded to Shimizu Corporation - PT Adhi Karya JV.
  • CP 203 (Construction of Glodok and Kota stations and related tunnelling works) awarded to Sumitomo Mitsui Construction Company - PT Hutama Karya JO.
  • CP 204 (Construction of depot at Ancol Barat).
  • CP 205 (Construction of railway systems and trackworks) awarded to Sojitz-Larsen and Toubro Limited JV.
  • CP 206 (Construction of 14 sets of rolling stock).
  • CP 207 (Installation of Automatic Fare Collection system).

Groundbreaking for Phase 2 was initially planned to begin on 19 December 2018. However, due to land acquisition issues, it was pushed back to January 2019. On 30 January 2019, President Director of PT MRT Jakarta, William Sabandar announced that the groundbreaking ceremony is delayed again as the State Secretariat had yet to issue a land-use permit for the area near Medan Merdeka.[12] The groundbreaking ceremony for Phase 2 was finally held on 24 March 2019 and advanced works began in June 2019 near the future Monas station.[13]

Site works for contract CP201 were originally planned to begin in March 2020. However, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it was pushed back by three months to June 2020.[14] Site works for contract CP203 began in September 2021.[15] Site works for CP202 began in August 2022, after multiple delays in securing a bidder.[16] Phase 2A will commence operations in 2028, and Phase 2B will follow suit four years later.[17]

Funding

Phase 1 was funded through soft loans by the JBIC, which now has merged to JICA. The loan tenor is 30 years and a grace period of 10 years. The first payment is made 10 years after signing the agreement. Payments last up to 30 years afterward with an interest rate of 0.25% per annum.[18]

Meanwhile, phase II is funded by a loan with a similar scheme by JICA but with a tenor of 40 years. The first payment is made 10 years after signing the agreement. The interest charged is 0.1% on the first stage of payment. This funding also includes part of the funding for phase I due to budget shortfalls, one of which is used to implement updated government regulations on preventing the impact of earthquakes. The debt payment burden is divided into 49% by the Jakarta Provincial Government and 51% by the Directorate General of Railways.[19]

Network

Route

Jakarta MRT train departing from ASEAN station and approaching Blok M station

The North–South line connects the Lebak Bulus region in South Jakarta with Ancol in North Jakarta. For now, only the 15.7 km (9.8 mi) section between Lebak Bulus Station and Bundaran Hotel Indonesia Station is operational. This line serves 13 stations[a] with 7 elevated stations and 6 underground stations.[b] The elevated structure stretches for approximately 10 km (6.2 mi) from Lebak Bulus Station to ASEAN Station. The underground line stretches for approximately 6 km (3.7 mi) from Senayan Station to Bundaran HI Station. The transition between elevated and underground lines is located between ASEAN Station and Senayan Station. This line is planned to intersect with the East–West Line at Thamrin Station.[20]

Stations

The stations on the north–south line are generally uniformly designed. With the exception of Blok M station, all stations have two tracks.[21]

The stations also have a number of supporting facilities, such as free WiFi and disabled-friendly toilets. In the concourse area, there are ATMs and various retail kiosks. In addition, there is also a nursing room and a prayer room.[22][23] Each station is equipped with a flood barrier, so it is ensured that all stations are flood-free.[24]

It is also planned that each station will be connected to a transit-oriented development area. One of them is the Dukuh Atas Station, which is connected to the KRL Commuterline and Soekarno–Hatta Airport Rail Link through the Dukuh Atas TOD. In addition, there are transit-oriented areas at Istora Senayan Station, Blok M, ASEAN, Fatmawati, and Lebak Bulus. The development of the TODs can take the form of building public facilities and housing around the station, as well as improving access to other modes of transportation.[25][26]

List of stations

Region Number Station Name Transfers/Notes Elevation
Phase 2B (planned, operational by 2032)
North Jakarta M22 Ancol List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 5 List of Transjakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes List of Transjakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes Ancol (planned) Underground
M21 Mangga Dua Kampung Bandan (planned)

List of TransJakarta corridors#Corridor 12 Mangga Dua (planned)

Phase 2A (under construction, operational by 2028)
West Jakarta M20 Kota Future Phase 2A terminus

Kereta Api Indonesia Jakarta Kota (under construction)

List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 List of TransJakarta corridors#Corridor 12 Kota (under construction)

Underground
M19 Glodok List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 Glodok (under construction)
M18 Mangga Besar List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 Mangga Besar (under construction)
Central Jakarta M17 Sawah Besar List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 Sawah Besar (under construction)
M16 Harmoni List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 2 List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 3 List of Transjakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes List of Transjakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes List of TransJakarta corridors#Corridor 8 List of TransJakarta corridors#Corridor 8 List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes Harmoni (under construction)
Phase 2A (under construction, operational by 2027)
Central Jakarta M15 Monas List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 2 List of Transjakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes Monas (under construction) Underground
M14

TB25

Thamrin Planned interchange station to

List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes Kebon Sirih (under construction)

Phase 1
Central Jakarta M13 Bundaran HI Phase 1 terminus

List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes Bundaran HI Astra

Underground
M12 Dukuh Atas BNI Sudirman

BNI City

Dukuh Atas

List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes Dukuh Atas

List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 4 List of TransJakarta corridors#Corridor 6 Galunggung

M11 Setiabudi Astra
M10 Bendungan Hilir
M09 Istora Mandiri List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 Polda Metro Jaya
M08 Senayan Mastercard List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes Bundaran Senayan
South Jakarta M07 ASEAN[27] Initially named 'Sisingamangaraja'

List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes Masjid Agung

List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes ASEAN

List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 Kejaksaan Agung

List of TransJakarta corridors#Corridor 13 List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes List of TransJakarta corridors#Cross-corridor routes CSW 1

Elevated
M06 Blok M BCA List of Transjakarta corridors#Corridor 1 Blok M

Bus Terminal Blok M Bus Terminal (via short walk)

M05 Blok A
M04 Haji Nawi
M03 Cipete Raya
M02 Fatmawati Indomaret Planned interchange station to
M01 Lebak Bulus Grab Terminal station

List of TransJakarta corridors#Corridor 8 Lebak Bulus

Bus Terminal Lebak Bulus Bus Terminal (via short walk)

Rolling stock

Jakarta MRT set 11 departing from Haji Nawi station

The North–South line of the Jakarta MRT uses a fleet made by the Nippon Sharyo consortium from Japan which and known as "Ratangga".[28][29] The fleet consists of 16 trains, each with six carriages. Each carriage has four doors on either side, except for the first and last carriages which have driver's cabins. Work on building the trains started in 2015 and they began to be delivered to Indonesia in 2018.[30][31] The trains began to fully operate in conjunction with the inauguration of the line on March 24, 2019.

An additional fourteen sets (under Contract Package CP 206) will be added to the trains for the second phase leading to Ancol.

Incidents

  • On November 3, 2017, an MRT line barrier fell. The incident occurred at around 22.00 at the intersection between Jalan Panglima Polim and Jalan Wijaya II. This incident resulted in a motorcyclist being injured and hitting a car. This incident was caused by an unbalanced crane when lifting a parapet wall. The parapet concrete that was lifted then fell from the construction site on the flyover. It was found out after the investigation, the contractor did not follow the appropriate lifting method with the crane arm being too long and the lack of supervision from the supervisor. In addition, the lack of traffic security at the time of the incident was the cause of the victims. The Corporate Secretary of PT MRT Jakarta, Tubagus Hikmatullah said that traffic security has been carried out on some roads. However, the concrete barrier fell outside the safe area of traffic restrictions because it was first caught by the crane before it actually fell onto the road.[32][33]
  • On May 30, 2024, an iron beam held by tower crane machine from construction project of the new building of Kejaksaan Agung RI (English: Attorney General's Office of Indonesia) fell onto the tracks when a trainset was passing near Blok M station, causing fire sparks and power outage of the trainset.[34] The service of the entire North–South Line was temporarily halted to evacuate the iron beam and check the condition of tracks and signaling. No human victims were reported and all passengers of each operating trainset were evacuated to the nearest station. The investigation reported that the crane machine suddenly lost power and lost grip of the beam due to electromagnetic induction caused by the trainset passing nearby, thus the beam was pulled onto the tracks by electromagnetic force.[35] PT Hutama Karya (Corp) which was responsible for the construction project apologised for the accident and agreed with PT MRT Jakarta to increase safe area of the crane to at least 8 meters from the MRT area, up from previously-agreed 6 meters. The North–South Line returned back to normal service the next day.

Footnotes

  1. ^ It is planned that there will be 23 stations on the entire line.
  2. ^ It is planned that there will be a total of 16 underground stations on the entire line.

References

  1. ^ a b "Sistem Subway Jadi Prioritas, Kans Itochu Semakin Beasar". Mutiara. 17 January 1995.
  2. ^ a b "Perluasan Rute MRT, Integrasi, dan Kehidupan di "Bawah Tanah"". Robert Adhi Ksp (in Indonesian). 2024-08-20. Retrieved 2024-09-01.
  3. ^ Nas, P. (2002). The Indonesian Town Revisited.
  4. ^ "Engineering Services For Jakarta Mass Rapid Transit System Project".
  5. ^ "Jepang Danai Mega Proyek MRT". detikcom. 28 November 2006. Retrieved 2021-02-21.
  6. ^ "Jepang Beri Pinjaman Untuk Pembangunan MRT". ANTARA News. 29 November 2006. Retrieved 2021-02-21.
  7. ^ "Jakarta metro contracts signed". Railway Gazette International. 13 June 2013.
  8. ^ "Pengeboran Jalur "Underground" di MRT Fase I Sudah Selesai". 14 March 2017.
  9. ^ "MRT Jakarta focuses on constructing stations, depot". The Jakarta Post. Retrieved 1 December 2017.
  10. ^ "The News We've All Been Waiting For: Jakarta MRT Open for Public in March". Jakarta Globe. 22 February 2019.
  11. ^ "Operasional MRT Diresmikan Jokowi 24 Maret". CNN Indonesia. 18 March 2019.
  12. ^ "Groundbreaking MRT Fase II Molor (Lagi)". 30 January 2019.
  13. ^ "MRT Jakarta decides on Ancol as site of depot in Phase II construction". The Jakarta Post. Retrieved 20 June 2019.
  14. ^ "Imbas Corona, Proyek MRT Jakarta Fase 2 Diundur ke Juni 2020". Kompas. 29 April 2020.
  15. ^ "Akhir 2021, Konstruksi MRT Mangga Besar-Kota Dimulai". Investor ID. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  16. ^ "Banyak Kendala, MRT Jakarta Fase 2A Nembus Perut Bumi 27 M". CNBC Indonesia (in Indonesian). 18 August 2022.
  17. ^ Arini, Shafira Cendra. "MRT Jakarta Fase 2 Ditargetkan Kelar 2032, Jalur Ancol Bakal Digarap". detikfinance (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2024-08-10.
  18. ^ Mediatama, Grahanusa (2012-08-30). "Foke: Pembangunan fisik MRT harus kelar tahun 2016". kontan.co.id (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  19. ^ Simorangkir, Eduardo. "Mengintip Skema Pembayaran Utang Pembangunan MRT Jakarta". detikfinance (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  20. ^ Indraini, Anisa. "Mengintip Desain 'Wah' 2 Stasiun Baru MRT Jakarta". detikfinance (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  21. ^ "Stasiun Blok M BCA | MRT Jakarta". jakartamrt.co.id. Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  22. ^ "Melihat Kecanggihan Fasilitas di Stasiun MRT". kumparan (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  23. ^ Liputan6.com (2019-03-01). "Selain Wifi Gratis, Ini Beragam Fasilitas yang Ditawarkan MRT Jakarta". liputan6.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2022-10-31.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  24. ^ developer, mediaindonesia com (2020-01-31). "Antisipasi Banjir, MRT Jakarta Siapkan Flood Gate". mediaindonesia.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  25. ^ "MRT Jakarta Siapkan 5 Kawasan TOD". kumparan (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  26. ^ "Serius Bangun Kawasan Trasit Terpadu, MRT Jakarta Bentuk Anak Usaha ITJ". Bisnis.com (in Indonesian). 2020-07-02. Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  27. ^ "Menjajal Ratangga, MRT Jakarta yang Diuji Coba Hari Ini". 12 March 2019.
  28. ^ "PROYEK MRT JAKARTA: Sumitomo Corporation Menangkan Tender Kereta Listrik". Bisnis.com (in Indonesian). 2015-03-03. Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  29. ^ Sugiharto, Jobpie (2017-12-11). "Melihat Kereta MRT Jakarta Diproduksi: Tak Lagi Mirip Jangkrik". Tempo. Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  30. ^ Mutmainah, Hesti Rika & Dinda Audriene. "Dua Rangkaian Kereta MRT Datang, Siap Uji Coba Agustus". ekonomi (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  31. ^ Yasmin, Puti Aini. "Gerbong MRT Tiba, Menhub Cek Langsung ke Tanjung Priok". detikfinance (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  32. ^ BeritaSatu.com (2017-11-04). "Dinding Pembatas MRT Jatuh Menimpa Pengendara Motor". beritasatu.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  33. ^ "Dinding Beton Jatuh, PT MRT Jakarta Beberkan Hasil Investigasi". Bisnis.com (in Indonesian). 2017-11-05. Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  34. ^ Media, Kompas Cyber (2024-05-30). "Operasional MRT Jakarta Dihentikan Sementara Imbas Besi Crane Jatuh ke Rel". KOMPAS.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2024-05-30.
  35. ^ Media, Kompas Cyber (2024-05-31). "Hutama Karya: Jatuhnya Besi Konstruksi di Jalur MRT Dipicu Induksi Elektromagnetik". KOMPAS.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2024-05-31.