After an hour’s drive through the jungle of Borneo, you reach more jungle. Your rental van from the Balikpapan city airport shakes precariously, navigating a partial bridge washout. A roadside sign admonishes against poaching the endangered sun bears.
By hour three you’ve arrived at Indonesia’s new capital, which is due to start taking over from gridlocked, polluted and seaward-sinking Jakarta in 2028.
Welcome to Ibu Kota Nusantara, known locally as just Nusantara or IKN. Eventually, if all goes…
Muddy yet clear-cut: How Chinese investors are turning jungle into Indonesia’s new capital

