Krukut River

Krukut River is a river flowing in Jakarta originating in Bogor Regency.[1] In the past the river was clean and one of the tourist attractions during the Dutch East Indies administration, but due to denser housing on the banks and lack of maintenance, the water turned dark and filled with trash, causing routine flooding in rainy seasons.[2]

Krukut River
Kali Cideng, Kali Krukut Satu,
Kali Kroekoet, Kali Kruukut, Sungai Krukut
Krukut River ("K. Krukut"), lower left in the map of rivers and canals of Jakarta (2012)
Location of the mouth
Krukut River (Indonesia)
Native nameKali Krukut
Location
CountryIndonesia
StateJakarta
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationDepok, West Java
MouthBanjir Kanal Barat, Ci Liwung
  coordinates
6°11′59″S 106°48′41″E
Length31.39 km (19.50 mi)

Etimology

"Krukut" is a name of a neighborhood in the district of Taman Sari, West Jakarta, located between two rivers: Ci Liwung and Cideng (later known as "Kali Krukut").[3] Old tales give multiple versions of the etymology of the name. It may originate from the word "krokot" in Betawi language, denoting a "very frugal" lifestyle, which was applied to a community of Arab people living in the area, as "Arab Krukut", until this day.[3][4] Another version refers to the Dutch word "kerkhof" (meaning "cemetery"), which was transliterated in Betawi tongue as "Krukut", which points to many cemeteries for local Betawi people around this area in the past.[3]

History

Krukut river has the upstream at Situ Citayam, Depok, West Java, and today it ends near Karet area, merging into "Banjir Kanal Barat", with a total length of 84.4 kilometer, of which about 30 kilometer is the main river.[2] The downstream of Krukut river has caused severe flooding in Jakarta since 1890. The intermittent widening, digging and straightening of the flow in the decades managed to partially tame some parts. However, in August 2016, the luxurious and also iconic area of South Jakarta, Kemang, was inundated by the overflow of Krukut, after some protecting walls were damaged due to unprecedented high discharge. Other incidents were regularly reported from Kebalen to Pondok Labu in South Jakarta.[2]

In early 1970s, the width of Krukut was about 25 meter, and deeper than normal human height. Its flow was a source of irrigation for rice fields and fish farming. No housing was allowed to built as this was a designated water flow area. However, since then many buildings were illegally erected along the banks, and the people threws household trash in the river, that even after the cleaning in 2017, the width of Krukut became as narrow as 1.5 meter in some points (according to Iskandar, the head of Balai Besar Wilayah Sungai Ciliwung-Cisadane/BBWSCC).[2]

Actually, a small stream of Krukut reappears about 300 meter from the confluence with Banjir Kanal Barat, at the administrative village of Kebon Melati, with the width of 3 meter, known locally as "Old Krukut" ("Krukut Lama") or "Lower Krukut" ("Krukut Bawah"). This stream meanders 31.4 kilometer before merging into Kali Pakin at Krukut area, West Jakarta, then into "Kali Besar" and finally reaching the Pluit Dam at Pintu Air Pasar Ikan, indirectly discharged into Jakarta Bay.[2]

Hydrology

Krukut river has a length of 31.39 kilometres (19.50 mi), with the watershed area (Indonesian: Daerah Pengaliran Sungai) of 84.99 km².[5] The average daily rainfall is 129 mm, with the peak discharge at 135 m³.[5]

Geography

The river flows in the northwest area of Java with predominantly tropical rainforest climate (designated as Af in the Köppen-Geiger climate classification).[6] The annual average temperature in the area is 27 °C. The warmest month is March, when the average temperature is around 30 °C, and the coldest is May, at 26 °C.[7] The average annual rainfall is 3674 mm. The wettest month is December, with an average of 456 mm rainfall, and the driest is September, with 87 mm rainfall.[8]

Normalisation

The normalisation of Krukut river started in the era of Governor Ali Sadikin, 1966-1977, to include the straightening of the flow, cutting problematic river bends and removing small sedimentation islands in the stream. This project was part of flood handling strategy, involving the removal of some 8,000 people from the housing on the river banks of Kali Krukut Cideng canal (Kompas, 21 February 1971).[2]

In 2010, the government ordered the digging of the river, removing 1000 cubic meter of mud in a stretch of 1.1 km. This was accompanied by cleaning the blocked drains and educating local people about sanitary and river maintenance.[9] The government of Jakarta also vowed to evict luxury houses that illegally occupied the designated open green space along the Krukut river banks, which was the caused of heavy flood in Kemang and its surrounding in August 2016.[10] It was reported that the width of Krukut river has decreased from 20 meter to only 4-5 meter due to the illegal buildings.[10]

Until 2017, the river has been normalised by BBWSCC from Rengas Bridge to Jalan Kebalen V in Kuningan.[2]

gollark: I really wondered when you were going to notice.
gollark: Using checking.
gollark: There is, I checked.
gollark: You can upload HTML files and it can put them in iframes. Why is this worrying?
gollark: … using the perfectly functional iframe thing for HTML? How is this an issue?

See also

References

  1. Kali Krukut Satu - Geonames.org.
  2. Krukut, Jinak di Hilir, Liar di Hulu - Irene Sarwindaningrum, Amanda Putri Nugrahanti - Kompas.com - 23 Januari 2017.
  3. Jakarta Tempo Doeloe: Asal Usul Nama Krukut Jakarta Barat - Nurudin Abdullah - Jakarta.Bisnis.com - 9 Mei 2016
  4. Zaenuddin HM,212 Asal-Usul Djakarta Tempo Doeloe. Ufuk Press. Oktober 2012.
  5. BBWS Ciliwung Cisadane. Pengendalian Banjir dan Perbaikan Sungai Ciliwung Cisadane (PBPS CC). Archived in Konservasi DAS Ciliwung - April 2012.
  6. Peel, M C; Finlayson, B L; McMahon, T A (2007). "Updated world map of the Köppen-Geiger climate classification". Hydrology and Earth System Sciences. 11. doi:10.5194/hess-11-1633-2007.
  7. "NASA Earth Observations Data Set Index". NASA. 30 January 2016.
  8. "NASA Earth Observations: Rainfall (1 month - TRMM)". NASA/Tropical Rainfall Monitoring Mission. 30 January 2016.
  9. Pengerukan Kali Krukut Guna Hasilkan Air Bersih. Diakses dari situs BPPS PAM Kementrian Pekerjaan Umum pada 16 Januari 2014
  10. Jakarta vows to evict luxury houses along Krukut River - Callistasia Anggun Wijaya - The Jakarta Post - September 2, 2016
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.