Technosphere Magazine: Jakarta: A Colonial Water-Management Fantasy Park
▻https://technosphere-magazine.hkw.de/p/98856ef0-1ea8-11e7-8957-371a68f4db9b
We could say that we have something of a geological curse beneath us in Jakarta, which in a way is like many other Asian delta cities—of course, not all of these other cities were colonial settlements, but Batavia certainly was. What kind of Holocene fantasy was in the mind of the Dutch when they moved into a pestilential, mosquito-filled mangrove swamp and decided to show their manly engineering brilliance by turning it into a capital city? I mean it’s completely absurd. But now we’re stuck there, all 31 million residents who are now living among the thirteen rivers that run from the mountains to the sea through this sprawling megacity. And we’re stuck with the 1,100 kilometers of canals the Dutch decided to cut through the landscape. We’re stuck because Indonesians can’t just decide that—after the Dutch made this swamp into an extremely costly colonial investment over the course of a hundreds of years—to just call it off, and instead move to some different place. We have to remember that these colonial path dependencies are really about the control of nature. People from Europe look at Indonesia today and say: “Wow, this is totally fucked. There’s been a city there for over three hundred years, but they still can’t get it together to stop the flooding.”