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| MM2100 Industrial Town | |
|---|---|
| Name | MM2100 Industrial Town |
| Settlement type | Industrial town |
| Subdivision type | Country |
| Subdivision name | Indonesia |
| Subdivision type1 | Province |
| Subdivision name1 | West Java |
| Subdivision type2 | Regency |
| Subdivision name2 | Bekasi Regency |
| Established title | Established |
| Established date | 1990s |
| Area total km2 | 3.0 |
| Timezone | Indonesia Western Time |
| Utc offset | +7 |
MM2100 Industrial Town is a planned industrial estate and mixed-use township in West Java, Indonesia, developed as a manufacturing and logistics hub near Jakarta. It functions as an integrated complex combining factories, warehouses, housing, and commercial amenities, attracting domestic and multinational corporations across automotive, electronics, and consumer goods sectors. The township is notable for its proximity to major Indonesian transportation corridors and its role in regional industrialization initiatives.
The site originated during the late-20th-century industrial expansion associated with policies implemented under Suharto, the New Order era, and later investment waves tied to trade liberalization and the Asian financial crisis of 1997. Development was driven by private developers alongside incentives from West Java and Bekasi Regency authorities, intersecting with regional planning influenced by the Jakarta metropolitan area growth and industrial decentralization strategies. Over time the estate hosted firms from Japan, South Korea, United States, Germany, Taiwan, and Singapore, reflecting patterns seen in corridors like the Kawasan Industri Jababeka, MM2100 Industrial Town neighbors and complements projects such as Kawasan Industri Cikarang and Lippo Cikarang. Corporate entrants included multinational names comparable to Toyota, Daihatsu, Mitsubishi, Panasonic, Samsung Electronics, Unilever, Coca-Cola, and Procter & Gamble, spurring ancillary services and logistics firms akin to DHL, FedEx, Kuehne + Nagel, and DB Schenker.
The township sits within the industrial belt east of Jakarta in Bekasi Regency, part of the greater Jabodetabek conurbation adjacent to the Cikarang area and near the Jakarta–Cikampek Toll Road. Its location relates to regional nodes like Karawang, Tangerang, Bogor, and Depok, linking to maritime gateways such as Port of Tanjung Priok and air hubs including Soekarno–Hatta International Airport and Halim Perdanakusuma Airport. The terrain is characteristic of northern Java lowlands, bounded by rivers and floodplains interacting with drainage basins feeding into the Jakarta Bay watershed. Proximity to infrastructure corridors mirrors patterns found around the Trans-Java Toll Road and industrial clusters including Kawasan Industri MM2100 competitors.
The economic base centers on manufacturing, assembly, and logistics with industry verticals spanning automotive, electronics, consumer goods, and light industrial fabrication. The estate serves as a site for original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) and tiered suppliers featuring companies comparable to Aisin, Denso, Bosch, LG Electronics, and Hitachi. Logistics and warehousing firms mirror entities like Maersk, Nippon Express, and Yusen Logistics, supporting export flows through Port of Tanjung Priok and domestic distribution to retail networks such as Hypermart, Modern Trade, and Alfamart. Financial services, insurance firms like Axa, Prudential, and local banks including Bank Mandiri, Bank Central Asia, and Bank Negara Indonesia provide corporate services. The industrial ecosystem intersects with trade policy frameworks shaped by institutions like Ministry of Industry (Indonesia), BKPM, and regional economic plans coordinated with West Java Provincial Government.
Connectivity is anchored by access to the Jakarta–Cikampek Toll Road, feeder roads to Cikarang-Cilincing corridors, and proximity to rail nodes on lines operated historically by Kereta Api Indonesia. Freight movements tie into logistics chains linked to Soekarno–Hatta International Airport cargo operations and seaports such as Port of Tanjung Priok and Patimban Port projects. Utilities and services are delivered through partnerships with regional providers similar to Perusahaan Listrik Negara for electricity, Perum Jasa Tirta-type water management, and private waste management contractors. Industrial estate infrastructure planning references standards seen in developments like Jababeka, KIIC, and Delta Silicon.
The township integrates residential clusters, commercial centers, healthcare clinics, and recreational amenities designed to serve employees and expatriates, paralleling facilities in Lippo Cikarang and Meikarta-scale projects. Onsite services include retail outlets akin to Hypermart, food and beverage tenants similar to McDonald's, KFC, and local chains like Warung Sate equivalents, medical clinics comparable to Siloam Hospitals, and entertainment venues aligning with mall concepts such as AEON Mall and Summarecon Mall. Housing options range from worker dormitories and gated communities to mixed-use apartments developed by firms resembling Summarecon, Lippo Group, and Agung Podomoro Land-type developers. Community programs often coordinate with NGOs and trade associations such as KADIN and labor organizations inspired by KSPI and FSPMI.
Administration interacts with Bekasi Regency authorities and provincial agencies under regulatory frameworks influenced by statutes like national investment regulations and zonation policies overseen by bodies such as BKPM and Ministry of Public Works and Housing (Indonesia). Land use, licensing, and environmental compliance engage provincial offices and municipal counterparts, mirroring practices involving BAPEDDA-style planning boards and environmental agencies akin to KLHK. Public safety coordination involves institutions analogous to Kepolisian Negara Republik Indonesia and emergency services modeled on Badan Nasional Penanggulangan Bencana protocols.
Skills and training infrastructure includes vocational institutions and corporate training centers comparable to Balai Latihan Kerja programs, partnerships with universities such as Universitas Indonesia, Institut Teknologi Bandung, Universitas Padjadjaran, and polytechnics mirrored by Politeknik Negeri Jakarta. Workforce development initiatives involve collaborations with trade associations like KADIN, multinational corporate training programs modeled on Toyota Motor Corporation-style academies, and government employment services similar to Kemnaker. Recruitment channels include local labor markets in Bekasi, migrant worker networks tied to provinces like Central Java and East Java, and agency collaborations with entities comparable to BPJS Kesehatan for worker welfare coverage.
Category:Industrial parks in Indonesia