Infrastructure 11% of the railway consists of
tunnel sections spanned over 13 tunnels, while 38% is set on
viaducts. Tunnel 6, the longest tunnel, has a length of 4,478 meters on the Jakarta-Bandung high-speed rail.
Halim railway station, the largest station on the railway, is situated in
Makasar in
East Jakarta and consists of three platforms with six track lines; it is expected to connect with
LRT Jabodebek. The station has a total area of 78,315 square metres. The railway is built on a
double track and
electrified, suitable for 350 km/h (220 mph).
Stations There are four stations on the line. One of them,
Karawang, was officially opened on 24 December 2024.
Rolling stock The Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Rail will use 11 trainsets of the derivative of
CR400AF called KCIC400AF. There is also one
comprehensive inspection train which is also a derivative of CR400AF called KCIC400AF-CIT. On Friday, 16 October 2015, Chinese and Indonesian state-owned companies officially signed the deal to build the first high-speed railway in Indonesia. The project cost was estimated to be US$5.5 billion (80 trillion rupiah). The deal was signed by China Railway International Co. Ltd. Chairman Yang Zhongmin and Dwi Windarto, the president director of a consortium of Indonesian state companies, PT Pilar Sinergi BUMN Indonesia.
China Development Bank has given a commitment to fund 75 percent of the project costs with loan terms of 40 years for the loan—with an initial grace period of 10 years—with fixed loan rate. CRCC will hold majority shares in the planned JV company, while WIKA holds 30 percent and small portions for local toll operator PT Jasa Marga Tbk (IDX: JSMR), train operator PT
Kereta Api Indonesia and plantation company PT Perkebunan Nusantara VIII.
Timeline 2016 •
January: Indonesian president Joko Widodo attended a ground breaking ceremony near Jakarta and announced that the project had commenced. •
May: Continual delays in acquiring land were being reported. The president of the Indonesian joint venture firm managing the project KCIC, Hanggoro Budi Wiryawan, expressed frustration at the Department of Transport requirement that all of the land needed for the project (estimated to be 600 ha) be acquired before final construction permits could be issued. Hanggoro argued that it was more usual for construction permits to be issued when just 10% of the required land for a project had been acquired. He said that the delays in the Department of Transport were unreasonable. Issues surrounding acquisition of land were complicated by the fact that the main station at the Jakarta end was planned to be on land occupied by the Indonesian Air Force at
Halim Perdanakusuma International Airport. It was not clear whether the Air Force was prepared to release the land. •
August: The Minister for State-Owned Enterprises,
Rini Soemarno, said that the process of issuing permits for the project was running smoothly after earlier delays. She said that she believed that construction on the railway could start within a week. •
November: 82 percent of land needed has been acquired, but bank funding will only be attainable after 100 percent land is acquired.
2017 •
March: The project is stalled due to land, finance and security issues. Among others is the
Indonesian Air Force reluctance to release 49 hectares of the lands surrounding
Halim Perdanakusuma Airbase on the south-eastern outskirts of Jakarta for the construction of the station. •
April: PT Kereta Cepat Indonesia-China (KCIC) and High-Speed Railway Contractor Consortium (KSRCC) signed an engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) contract on the Jakarta – Bandung bullet train on April 4, 2017. Contractors will proceed with construction following the contract signing.
2018 •
January: The
Jakarta Post referred to the project as "stagnant" and Maritime Affairs Coordinating Minister
Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan announced that a review would be conducted to consider whether a high-speed rail system really was needed between Jakarta and Bandung because "the cities are only 140 kilometres apart." •
March: It was reported that government agencies (the National Land Agency and the Agrarian and Spatial Planning Ministry) suspected that there had been maladministration in the acquisition of over 1,800 plots of land for the project. As a result, approval of permits for the use of land for the project had been delayed. •
April: State-owned enterprises minister Rini Soemarno, on a visit to Beijing, said that project construction would start in the coming month, May, and that she hoped that perhaps construction could start even sooner. She also said that she hoped land acquisition could be completed by the end of May. •
July: Three lawsuits received legal approval from the courts to proceed with claims seeking compensation for their properties affected by the project. Meanwhile, KCIC said that the progress of the project would not be affected by the lawsuits. The main financier of the project, China Development Bank, had disbursed $170 million in May and was due to disburse another $1.1 billion before the end of July. •
August: Beginning construction by High-Speed Railway Contractor Consortium (HSRCC) after a cooperation contract was signed with Cars Dardela Joint Operation as construction supervisor for the Jakarta-Bandung High Speed Train Project.
2019 •
March: The boring machine arrived and was assembled. Drilling started under the
Jakarta-Cikampek Toll Road between KM 3+600 - KM5+800. Progress Reached 13% •
May: The Walini tunnel become the first breakthrough tunnel in the high speed rail projects. Celebrated by many group of minister including a Minister of State-Owned Enterprises
Rini Soemarno and the West Java Governor
Ridwan Kamil. According to Rini Soemarno, progress reached 17.5% but estimated to be 59% in late 2019, and land acquisition was almost 100%. •
September: The construction progress reached 32.8% and land acquisition progress reached 99.0%. •
October: Construction progress 38.2%.
2020 In mid-February 2020, construction progress reached 44 percent and land acquisitions reach 99.96 percent. Due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, work of the project has been halted temporarily, resulting in the delay of the targeted finish of construction and start of the operation. Three months later, construction progress reached 48.3 percent and the construction works resumed, which follow government's health and safety measures, such as social/physical distancing in response to the pandemic. In September, Director of KCIC Xin Xuezhong stated that construction progress reached 60 percent and land acquisitions reached 100 percent.
2021 •
April: The General Manager of Material Equipment of PT KCIC stated that until March 2021 the construction of the Jakarta-Bandung High Speed Rail has reached 70 percent and is expected to be completed by the end of 2022. •
November: The construction progress reaches 79%.
2022 •
September: KCIC received the first delivery of KCIC400AF trainsets in Tanjung Priok Port, Jakarta. •
November: During the G20 Summit in Bali, President Jokowi and Xi remotely attended the trial run of CIT400AF inspection train, which ended a series of its maiden powered runs on HSR tracks to the west of Tegalluar station. •
December: A track laying machine and a
DF4B locomotive used in the construction of the railway derailed in West Bandung west of
Padalarang station, killing 2 workers and injuring another four. As result, track laying activities were temporarily halted while other construction works were allowed to continue. According to the Jakarta Post, Dwiyana Slamet Riyadi, the president director of KCIC, said that based on a 2022 third-party review, demand for the Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Rail line had fallen to 31,215 passenger trips per day, just over half of the 61,157 estimated in a 2017 feasibility study.
2023 •
May: Starting Monday, 22 May 2023, KCIC is gradually increasing the travel speed of the Jakarta Bandung High Speed Train (KCJB). This is done during the test or testing and commissioning of the train. With the comprehensive inspection train (CIT), the speed of the train was increased from the previous average of . The increase in the speed or speed of the trial can finally be done after all the initial preparations for testing and commissioning have been successfully completed. •
June: The speed level of the Jakarta-Bandung High Speed Train (KCJB) continued to increase during the trial period. For the first time the train reached a maximum speed of in a test on Thursday, 22 June 2023. The trial was attended by Coordinating Minister for Maritime Affairs and Investment Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan and Minister of Transportation Budi Karya Sumadi. Luhut and Budi Karya tried KCJB from Halim Station, Jakarta, to Padalarang Station and Tegalluar Station, Bandung, round trip. The top speed has reached its maximum at . •
June: The next trial was connecting the two train series was carried out to test reliability if it runs together as a form of anticipation if passengers boom. At certain moments, the train can be combined to increase the transport capacity. Mainly to anticipate a surge in passengers during high season, such as Eid al-Fitr, Christmas and New Year's homecoming, long holidays, and others. •
September: The High Speed Rail officially opened on Thursday after CCTV announced the opening after many delays of the opening of the line. •
November: daily trip schedule has been increased to 14 round-trip pairs (for a total of 28 trips) offering 16,828 seats, due to high demand as seen from the high number of ticket sales. •
December: The Whoosh high speed train has served 1,028,216 passengers during 2 months of commercial operation from 17 October to 25 December 2023. The highest number of passengers served in one day has reached 21,500 passengers per day, including during the current year-end holiday period. This achievement shows the high public interest in modern and reliable public transportation in Indonesia with travel time efficiency and comfort. == Bandung–Surabaya ==