You don't have javascript enabled. Good luck with that.
Pencarian
 Pembangunan 10 Waduk Capai 50 Persen

Construction Progress of 10 Reservoirs Reaches 50 Percent

Jakarta Water Resources (SDA) Department continues to construct 10 reservoirs in Jakarta this year. Now, its progress has reached 50 percent.

Total budget needed to construct those reservoirs reaches Rp 74 billion

Jakarta SDA Department Head, Juaini Yusuf stated, 3 of 10 reservoirs has applied naturalization concept. Those are Kampung Rambutan Reservoir as wide as 1.7 hectares, Kampung Rambutan 2 Reservoir 2.18 hectares, and Cimanggis Reservoir 4.89 hectares.

"Total budget needed to construct those reservoirs reaches Rp 74 billion," he informed, Monday (10/21).

300 Pumps Alerted to Face the Forthcoming Rainy Season

He explained, reservoirs built using naturalization concept are installed with grass block and mini elephant grass on its cliff. Thus later when the grass flourishes, the concrete block will be covered with grass.

"Not all retaining wall's cliffs are concreted. We also build jogging track, public toilet, and prayer room near the reservoir," he said.

His side added, there are other reservoirs built this year. Those are Pondok Ranggon Reservoir, Sunter Selatan Sisi Barat Reservoir, Cakung Timur Reservoir, Grogol Reservoir, and others.

"In order to prevent flood, these reservoirs will be functioned to hold water around the reservoir," he mentioned.

Linked News
Popular News indeks
  1. Pramono Flags Off 10,000 Runners at Soekarno Run 2026

    access_time15-02-2026 remove_red_eye1016 personFolmer
  2. Mark Your Calendars: Jakarta’s Lunar New Year 2026 Lineup is Here!

    access_time11-02-2026 remove_red_eye943 personAldi Geri Lumban Tobing
  3. Pramono Calls on Residents to Maintain Peace and Harmony During Ramadan

    access_time14-02-2026 remove_red_eye935 personFakhrizal Fakhri
  4. Jakarta Coastal Areas on Alert for Possible Tidal Flood

    access_time11-02-2026 remove_red_eye877 personAldi Geri Lumban Tobing
  5. Jakarta Unveils Indonesia’s First SDGs Corner at Maritime Museum

    access_time15-02-2026 remove_red_eye808 personNurito