Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Special Capital Region of Jakarta in Indonesia is divided into 5 administrative cities and one regency, which in turn are divided into districts (Indonesian: kecamatan), and subsequently subdistricts (Indonesian: kelurahan). In total, there are 44 districts and 267 subdistricts in Jakarta, a number that has remained constant since the most ...
Sudirman Central Business District (Indonesian: Kawasan Niaga Terpadu Sudirman), abbreviated and locally known as SCBD, [1] is a [2] [3] business district with an integrated mixed-use development concept, located in Sudirman Avenue, South Jakarta, Indonesia, with many skyscrapers [4] consisting of condominiums, office buildings, hotels, shopping and entertainment centers. [5]
S. St. Ursula Catholic School; Sekolah High/Scope Indonesia; SMA Angkasa 2 Jakarta; SMA Negeri 66 Jakarta; SMA Negeri 68 Jakarta; SMA Negeri 82 Jakarta; SMUK 1 Jakarta
Jakarta Taipei School (JTS; Chinese: 雅加達臺灣學校), formerly Jakarta Taipei International School (JTIS) in English, is an international school maintained by the Taiwan-based Republic of China government in Jakarta, Indonesia.
As of July 2021, there are 46 skyscrapers in Jakarta, which are taller than 200 meters. Jakarta has the highest numbers of 200-meter-plus skyscrapers among Southeast Asian cities. [7] Seven 200-meter-plus skyscrapers were completed in 2015 in Jakarta, which was the highest among the cities in the world during that year. [8]
Jakarta Indonesia Korean School (JIKS, Korean: 자카르타한국국제학교), formerly Jakarta International Korean School, is a South Korean international school in East Jakarta, Indonesia. [1] As of 2005 it is the largest overseas South Korean school, with 1,450 students. [ 2 ]
Canisius College (Indonesian: Kolese Kanisius) is a private Catholic secondary school for boys, located in Menteng, Central Jakarta, Java, Indonesia. The school was founded by the Indonesian Province of the Society of Jesus in 1927.
The German School was founded in 1956 by a group of German doctors that were stationed across Indonesia as part of their work for the World Health Organization.Due to the challenges of the tropical weather, they decided to send their children to the more temperate city of Bandung, where the German School started as a learning group of volunteer teachers and officially opened the year after.