Walking Kemang in Jakarta
Expatriate-friendly area with restaurants, cafes, and walkable commercial strips along Kemang Raya.
Why Kemang sits inside a walkable city
Kemang inherits the broader walkability conditions of Jakarta, Indonesia. Citywide factors that shape what walking here actually feels like:
- Jakarta MRT opened in 2019 with North-South line and East-West line under construction
- TransJakarta is the world's longest BRT network at 251 km with dedicated bus lanes
- Sudirman-Thamrin corridor has improving sidewalks, bike lanes, and is car-free on Sundays
- Dense kampung neighborhoods have narrow lanes that are naturally pedestrian-friendly at local scale
What to check before you walk here
Drop a specific address into SafeStreets to see how it scores on the four components we measure: Daily Reach (7 service categories within a 15-minute walk), Street Safety (vehicle speeds, intersections, crossings, sidewalks), Transit Reach (rail, bus, multi-modal), and Walking Comfort (tree canopy, terrain slope, air quality).
Getting around from Kemang
MRT Jakarta (1 line, expanding), LRT Jakarta, TransJakarta BRT (251 km), KRL commuter rail, angkot minibuses.
What can pull walkability down in Jakarta
- Severe flooding during monsoon season makes many streets impassable on foot
- Most arterial roads prioritize vehicles with minimal pedestrian crossing infrastructure
Other walkable neighborhoods in Jakarta
Menteng. Colonial-era garden district with wide tree-lined streets, embassies, and Jakarta's best maintained sidewalks.
Sudirman CBD. Financial corridor with MRT stations, connected skywalk system between malls, and improving street-level infrastructure.
Kota Tua (Old Town). Historic Dutch colonial square with pedestrianized Fatahillah Square, museums, and waterfront access.
Analyze an address in Kemang →
Back to all of Jakarta · All city walkability guides
Built by Streets & Commons.