Imagine living in a house of just 24 square meters with a family of three – and renting out half of the space to someone else.
he sun was blasting its heat on Jl. Jembatan Besi in Tambora, West Jakarta, at noon on Tuesday, yet not a single ray of light hit most parts of a narrow nearby alley called Gang Venus, leaving its residents shrouded in darkness.
A lack of space and the high cost of housing in the capital have forced people there to live in houses packed from wall to wall, with roofs and upper floors protruding over the alley, leaving no gaps for natural light to sneak in.
For light, the residents rely solely on lamps hanging from what is essentially the ceiling of the alley.
“The lamps and electric fans are kept on all day while we are at home,” said 32-year-old Ardila.
“We just hang our laundry up on the little terrace ceilings to dry with the heat.”
Ardila, a beverage vendor and mother of three, is one of hundreds of residents in this community unit (RW). Born and raised here, she is accustomed to the narrowness of the houses, the biggest of which measure 30 square meters.
Only about a quarter of some 3,000 residents living in the Jembatan Besi subdistrict of Tambora district are natives of the area, which is infamous as Jakarta’s most densely populated neighborhood.
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