Singonegoro – a settlement point in Jiken kecamatan, Blora kabupaten
Singonegoro is located as a village within Jiken kecamatan (district) in Blora kabupaten (regency), situated in the eastern part of Central Java (Jawa Tengah). The settlement forms an integral part of the central region of the Indonesian island of Java, positioned at a location that can be clearly identified according to coordinates running in both northwest-southeast directions. Blora kabupaten, under whose jurisdiction it falls, is an administrative area dating from the 1940s, which comprises more than 925,000 residents. The name Singonegoro is part of local Javanese tradition, and although settlement-level statistics are not directly available, the village can be evaluated within the structural units of the kabupaten and kecamatan.
General overview
Singonegoro is an agriculturally oriented area belonging to Jiken kecamatan, which conforms to the characteristics typical of rural villages in Central Java. The settlement, as part of the historical administrative structure of Blora kabupaten, represents a region of intensive agricultural and natural resource utilization. Although at Indonesian administrative levels, settlement-specific statistical data for this village often does not appear separately, Jiken kecamatan as a whole—of which it is a part—possesses a rural character that fundamentally relies on rice cultivation and other crop production, as well as smaller and larger industrial activities.
Blora kabupaten is an area lying to the east of Jawa Tengah, bordering Rembang, Pati, Tuban, and toward the East Java province—Bojonegoro, Ngawi, and Grobogan. The regency's transportation infrastructure connects to neighboring areas through the Indonesian national road network and rural transport systems. Singonegoro in this context is a classical Javanese rural village, which occupies its characteristic place within the structure of the given kecamatan.
Real estate and investment
The real estate market at Singonegoro level is not directly documented; however, in the general region of Blora kabupaten, real estate market dynamics follow patterns characteristic of rural Indonesian areas. The Indonesian rural real estate market fundamentally organizes itself around agricultural land, fixed residential accommodations, and smaller houses or enclosed gardens. Values here are typically considerably lower than real estate prices in Indonesian urban centers (Semarang, Surabaya), and depend on the development level of the area's infrastructure and direct transportation access to the given village.
The legal framework governing Indonesian real estate acquisition imposes strict restrictions on foreigners. Non-Indonesian citizens cannot acquire direct ownership of land or residential property built on the basis of long-term usufruct rights; instead, only time-limited rental contracts or property forms registered in the name of an Indonesian citizen are possible. In the region of Blora kabupaten, real estate market activity is fundamentally driven by Indonesian internal capital and capital movements around agriculture, which however in recent decades has increasingly made room for smaller investment and tourism-oriented projects in the eastern parts of the region.
Singonegoro and its narrower rural surroundings represent the lower category from the perspective of capital concentration, where real estate market movements are primarily generated by local demand, agricultural activity, and family-based real estate circulation. Speculative real estate market activity is typically limited to areas approaching literarily documented tourism centers and transportation hubs.
Safety and security
Detailed public data sources on public safety at Singonegoro settlement level are not available. The village operates within the structure of Jiken kecamatan, under the authority of Blora kabupaten's administrative and security organization. Among the general characteristics of Indonesian rural areas is the fact that villages located far from major transportation axes or the immediate environment of tourism centers typically exhibit lower crime frequencies; however, organized transportation robbery or organized crime can be considered to occur at approximately zero level in the area of our interest.
Blora kabupaten as a whole, preserving its rural character, is considered a relatively stable public safety area within Central Java province. The region's local police structure and civil public service organizations follow the customary Javanese public order maintenance model. Such natural hazards as extreme weather, floods, or geological dangers periodically occur based on the structure of the island of Java, but systematic data on Singonegoro area's specific exposure are not available.
Tourist attractions
Explicitly documented tourist attractions are not found in Singonegoro's area. The village is fundamentally a terrain of rural, agriculturally oriented cooperative and family businesses. Tourism-significant objects—temples, natural formations, historical monuments—are typically concentrated at the Blora kabupaten level or in spaces closer to Jiken kecamatan centers.
However, in the broader region of Blora kabupaten, there exist places that represent the area's historical and natural heritage. The Javanese religious (Hindu-Buddhist and Islamic) monuments are characteristic of the region, as well as places of national historical significance. Settlements such as Blora city center, or those kecamatan centers located near transportation hubs, generally possess better tourism infrastructure and information facilities. Singonegoro, forming part of the kecamatan's rural periphery, is primarily a point of interest from the perspective of studying local community and economic life, as well as agriculture.
Summary
Singonegoro is a rural village located in Jiken kecamatan, Blora kabupaten, which can be defined fundamentally by its agricultural characteristics and its Indonesian administrative structural distinctness. From the perspectives of real estate market, public safety, and tourism, the settlement can be evaluated according to the typical characteristics of the rural Central Java region. It occupies a place among Indonesian rural areas and derives significance from the textures of local community, economic, and social life, but is not fundamentally counted on for explicitly tourist or international investor appeal.

