Menteng Park

Menteng Park (Indonesian: Taman Menteng) is a park located at Menteng, Central Jakarta, Indonesia.[1] This park was formerly occupied by Menteng Stadium. In October 2006 the stadium was demolished and the park was built on the area by the administration of Sutiyoso. The park is located at the center of Menteng residential area. At present it is one of the popular park in Jakarta.[2]

Taman Menteng
Taman Menteng in Jakarta, Indonesia
TypeUrban park
LocationMenteng, Jakarta
Coordinates6.19403°S 106.83259°E / -6.19403; 106.83259
Area25 hectares (62 acres)
Created2006
Owned byProvincial Government of Special Capital Region of Jakarta
Operated byDepartment of Parks and Cemetery, Jakarta
StatusOpen all year
Public transit accessTransjakarta Corridor 6H: Taman Menteng

Description

The park stands on an area of 30 hectares, and has a collection of 30 different plant species. Menteng Park also has a variety of support facilities such as a playground for children, as well as futsal and basketball courts, jogging track, greenhouse, parking lot and exhibition corner.[3] There are free WiFi facility at different corners of the park. After dark the park area turns into a place for food lovers because of presence of food vendors. Uniquely, in this park there are also 44 absorption wells to help the absorption of rain water into the soil.

History

Before the creation of the park, there was the multi-purpose Menteng Stadium. It was used mostly for football reserve matches and was the home stadium of Persija football team. The stadium was built in 1921 with Dutch architects F.J. Kubatz dan P.A.J. Moojen and was named Voetbalbond Indische Omstreken Sport (VIOS-veld).

In October 2006 the stadium was demolished and a public park called Menteng Park was built on the area by the administration of Sutiyoso, governor of Jakarta at that time. The demolition was very debatable amongst the PSSI, because the Minister of Youth and Sports Affairs Adhyaksa Dault had not approved this action. The stadium's demolition also led to conflicts that almost disbanded Persija Jakarta.

See also

References

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