Bendungan Hilir (Transjakarta)

Last updated
107 Bendungan Hilir
BSicon BUS3.svg
Transjakarta bus rapid transit station
Halte Transjakarta Bendungan Hilir (2024).jpg
General information
LocationJenderal Sudirman Street
Gelora, Tanah Abang, Central Jakarta (northern side)
Senayan, Kebayoran Baru, South Jakarta (southern side)
Indonesia
Coordinates 6°13′01″S106°48′55″E / 6.21706°S 106.81531°E / -6.21706; 106.81531
Owned by Transjakarta
Operated by Transjakarta
Line(s) TransJakarta BRT Corridor 1 Icon.png
PlatformsSingle island platform
Construction
Structure typeAt-grade
Bicycle facilities Finnish bike symbol.svg
Accessible Wheelchair symbol.svg
Other information
StatusIn service
History
Opened
  • 15 January 2004 (2004-01-15)(soft launching)
  • 1 February 2004 (2004-02-01)(commercial operation)
Rebuilt14 July 2024
Services
Preceding TransJakarta Logo.svg Following
Polda Metro Jaya
towards Blok M
Corridor 1 Karet
towards Kali Besar
Widya Chandra Telkomsel
One-way operation
Corridor 6
transfer at Semanggi
Karet
towards Balai Kota
Widya Chandra Telkomsel
towards Pinang Ranti
Corridor 9
transfer at Semanggi
Gerbang Pemuda
towards Pluit
Widya Chandra Telkomsel
towards Cililitan
Corridor 9
transfer at Semanggi
Gerbang Pemuda
Widya Chandra Telkomsel
towards Pinang Ranti
Corridor 9
transfer at Semanggi
Senayan Bank DKI
One-way operation
Location
Bendungan Hilir (Transjakarta)

Bendungan Hilir (often abbreviated as Benhil) is a Transjakarta bus rapid transit station located on Sudirman Street, Karet Semanggi, Setiabudi, South Jakarta, Indonesia, that serves Corridor 1, which runs north to south. This station is connected to the Semanggi BRT station that serves Corridor 9. It is named after the district it is located in.

Contents

On October 7, 2023, at 22:00, the Bendungan Hilir station, along with the Semanggi station, were temporarily closed due to the revitalisation works. [1] [2] On July 14, 2024, at 16:00, the Bendungan Hilir station reopened to passengers. The reopening was carried out in stages, with the lift and Semanggi pedestrian bridge still under construction when the station reopened. [3]

Building and layout

The station has three bus bays on each side of the platform. The station is accessible through a pedestrian skybridge connected to both sides of Jenderal Sudirman Street, or through Komdak Semanggi Skybridge that crosses the Jakarta Inner Ring Road and Gatot Subroto Street, being the longest of its kind in Jakarta at 574 metres long. [4]

North TransJakarta BRT Corridor 1 Icon.png to Kota (Karet)
Island platform, the platform doors are opened on the right side of the direction of travel
South(Polda Metro Jaya) TransJakarta BRT Corridor 1 Icon.png to Blok M

Non-BRT bus services

The following non-BRT bus services stop around the Kebon Sirih station, last updated on March 23, 2025:

TypeRouteDestinationNotes
Transjakarta Non-BRT Transjakarta Non-BRT Route 1B Icon.png Palmerah StationDukuh Atas Outside the station
Transjakarta Non-BRT Route 1N Icon.png Tanah Abang StationTerminal Blok M
Transjakarta Non-BRT Route 1P Icon.png Senen—Blok M
Transjakarta Non-BRT Route 4C Icon.png Bundaran SenayanJIEP
Transjakarta Non-BRT Route 6D Icon.png Tebet Station—Bundaran Senayan
Transjakarta Non-BRT Route 9D Icon.png Pasar MingguTanah Abang Station
Royaltrans by Transjakarta Royaltrans roundel 1T.png Cibubur JunctionBalai Kota

Places nearby

References

  1. Aira, Tidar (2023-10-06). "Halte Transjakarta Bendungan Hilir dan Semanggi direvitalisasi besok, aktivitas dimulai jam 10 malam". Hops ID. Jakarta. Retrieved 2023-10-07.
  2. Kusumah, Fitrya Anugrah (2023-10-03). "Pengguna TransJ Harap Revitalisasi Halte Benhil-Semanggi Jangan Lama-lama". detiknews (in Indonesian). Jakarta. Retrieved 2023-10-07.
  3. Murti, Ari Sandita (2024-07-14). Haq, Muhammad Fida Ul (ed.). "Makin Megah, Halte Transjakarta Benhil Jakpus Kembali Dibuka Usai Revitalisasi". inews. Retrieved 2024-07-14.
  4. Syahrial, Rizky (2023-03-27). Movanita, Ambaranie Nadia Kemala (ed.). "Begini Rasanya Jalan di Jembatan Transjakarta Semanggi-Benhill Sepanjang 500 Meter..." KOMPAS.com (in Indonesian). Jakarta. Retrieved 2023-10-07.