Peta Jakarta 1980 [2025]
If you ever find an old Peta Jakarta from the 80s in a dusty bookshop in Blok M or at a flea market in Pasar Santa, buy it. Frame it. Because that Jakarta—the one of rice fields, becaks , and the old Banjir Kanal—is never coming back.
The map also shows situ (lakes) that have since vanished—small ponds in places like Pulo Mas and Rawamangun that were filled in to build housing complexes. The Ciliwung River is drawn with a thick, prominent blue line; today, it's hidden behind concrete walls and slums. Look at the legend. In 1980, the Becak (pedicab) was still a legal, respected form of transport. The map doesn't show the MRT (obviously), nor the TransJakarta busway. The primary arteries were Jalan Thamrin , Jalan Sudirman (which ended abruptly at a railway crossing near Senayan), and Jalan Gatot Subroto . Peta Jakarta 1980
Author’s Note: I have based this post on historical cartographic records and personal anecdotes from long-time residents. If you have a physical copy of this map, I would love to see a photo! If you ever find an old Peta Jakarta
For those of us who grew up in the 80s, or for the younger generation trying to imagine Jakarta before the traffic nightmare, this map is a revelation. This was Jakarta at the tail end of the Suharto Orde Baru (New Order) era—a city of 6.5 million people (less than a third of today's population) trying to transform from a sleepy colonial relic into a modern megalopolis. The map also shows situ (lakes) that have