The Trans-Kalimantan Highway Southern Route (Indonesian: Jalan Lintas Kalimantan Poros Selatan), or simply the Trans-Kalimantan Highway, (Indonesian: Jalan Lintas Kalimantan) is a 3,901-kilometre (2,424 mi) national road that forms the backbone highway system in Kalimantan, Indonesia.[1] It forms a part of the larger Pan-Borneo Highway network which also combines with highway networks of East Malaysia and Brunei. The combined highway network forms the entire Asian Highway Network Route AH150.[3]
The Trans-Kalimantan Highway Southern Route is one of the three backbone highways in Kalimantan being planned by the Indonesian government; the other two are the Trans-Kalimantan Highway Central Route(Jalan Lintas Kalimantan Poros Tengah) and the Trans-Kalimantan Highway Northern Route(Jalan Lintas Kalimantan Poros Utara). None of the three highways bear any route number yet. The total length of the Trans-Kalimantan Highway Southern Route is 3,901 kilometres (2,424 mi).[1]
The entire Trans-Kalimantan Highway Southern Route, together with the Trans-Malindo Highway and the section of the Trans-Kalimantan Highway Northern Route from Malinau City to Simanggaris, forms the Indonesian section of the Asian Highway Network route AH150.[3]
History
During colonial times in 1800s, the European colonists were obsessed in travelling across the Borneo island from east to west by land. In 1825, a troop of Dutch army led by Major George Muller began their expedition by going upstream along the Mahakam River from Samarinda to the river source before proceeding inland by foot. However, Muller and his troops mysteriously disappeared without any traces. Later, a Dutch doctor named Anton W. Niewenhuis became the first Dutch explorer who had successfully travelled across Borneo from Samarinda in the east to Pontianak in the west by land.[1]
However, the Kalimantan region still lacked a proper highway network until 1970s where logging companies began constructing logging roads before those roads were converted into national roads by the Indonesian government.[11] However, the construction to link the former logging roads to form the Trans-Kalimantan Highway was very sluggish. On 6 June 1989, the governors of the four Kalimantan provinces (West Kalimantan, Central Kalimantan, South Kalimantan and East Kalimantan) urged the central government to speed up the construction pace, and the Ministry of Public Works and People's Housing promised to them that the highway would be completed in 2009.[1] The Trans Kalimantan Highway Southern Route was completed in 2016 with the opening of the Tayan Bridge.[2]
The Trans-Kalimantan Highway Southern Route is notorious for its poor condition in many sections. As of 2010[update], 1,184 kilometres (736 mi) of the highway was built below the Asian Highway Network Class III standards (lane width: 3.0 m; design speed limit: 80 km/h).[3] Many sections of the highway is still unpaved yet, including the first 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) from its western terminus at the new border crossing in Aruk.[12]