Tamparak Layung – Small village in Barito Selatan Regency, Central Kalimantan
Tamparak Layung is located on the Indonesian island of Borneo in Barito Selatan Regency of Central Kalimantan (Kalimantan Tengah) Province, belonging to Dusun Utara District. The village is situated at coordinates 1.4386 latitude and 115.1059 longitude, which places it among the riverine areas of the regency. The Barito Selatan region is characteristically a fluvial territory where water and river systems determine life and infrastructure. The village operates as a typical Central Kalimantan small settlement, where the local community relies on traditional forms of livelihood.
General overview
Tamparak Layung is not considered a widely known tourist destination, but rather functions as a small village in Dusun Utara District. The Dusun Utara Kecamatan occupies the northern part of Barito Selatan Regency's territory, where settlements are generally small and scattered. Villages are characteristically located near pristine jungle areas or riverbanks, where transportation and supply chains often operate through waterways.
The village's population composition forms part of the ethnic and demographic picture of Central Kalimantan Province. According to the 2020 census data for Central Kalimantan Province, it counted approximately 2.67 million inhabitants, which had grown to approximately 2.78 million by mid-2024. The province encompasses 13 kabupatens and 1 city within the province, and is also one of the country's largest territories by area, covering 153,564.50 square kilometers. Tamparak Layung is part of Barito Selatan Regency, which lies in the south-central portion of the region.
Small villages like Tamparak Layung typically operate in the primary sector, in agriculture, forestry activities, or fishing. Transportation and goods transport often occur fluvially, through waterways. Basic infrastructure – schools, healthcare, commerce – is characteristically limited, and the village may depend on services from nearby towns or the regency center.
Real estate and investment
No settlement-specific real estate market data is available at the Tamparak Layung level, however general trends and opportunities can be identified at Barito Selatan Regency and broader Central Kalimantan Province levels. Central Kalimantan has experienced increasing economic activity in recent decades, particularly in agricultural, forestry, and extractive industries. Real estate market demand generally concentrates around larger settlements, urban centers, and areas with infrastructure access.
In Kalimantan's rural areas, property value and development potential largely depend on transportation connections, supply chain accessibility, and proximity to economic activity centers. Barito Selatan Regency, as a rural region, exhibits more modest real estate market activity than more urbanized zones. Small villages like Tamparak Layung typically operate with land use centered on subsistence economies, where land serves agricultural or hunting purposes.
Indonesian land ownership regulations fundamentally restrict foreign individual presence: foreigners can acquire at most a one-year usufruct right, and long-term property ownership is available exclusively to legal entities with Indonesian ties. In rural, low-value locations like Tamparak Layung, investment interest typically remains low, and the market is characteristically limited to local actors. Aggressive development or large-scale real estate investment in such small villages is rare.
Safety and security
Specific public safety data is not available at Tamparak Layung's level, however observations can be made at Barito Selatan Regency and Central Kalimantan Province general levels. Most Indonesian rural areas, particularly small villages, operate in relatively stable public safety situations, where local community cohesion and traditional behavioral norms function as strong structuring forces.
Central Kalimantan is generally not considered a region characterized by violent crime or organized crime. However, small villages like Tamparak Layung characteristically lie distant from strong formal police and administrative presence, meaning public safety largely derives from local community self-organization. In rural, riverine areas like where Tamparak Layung is located, illegal activities – such as unauthorized forest use or fishing – can sometimes be sources of local tensions, but these characteristically do not represent systemic public safety risks threatening the average resident at the village level.
For travelers or residents arriving in Tamparak Layung, basic caution following standard Indonesian rural protocols is recommended: oversight of valuables, respect for local customs, and fostering engagement with the local community to build mutual trust.
Tourist attractions
Tamparak Layung does not itself possess nationally or regionally known tourist attractions. Small villages are characteristically not centers of organized tourism, and smaller settlements like Tamparak Layung typically do not appear in tourism guidebooks or travel platforms. The village has no known temples, museums, historical monuments, or other designated attractions that would offer appeal to tourism.
At the broader Barito Selatan Regency level, however, Central Kalimantan region's natural endowments – jungle ecosystems, river systems, indigenous biodiversity – represent potential appeal for those interested in ecotourism and adventure purposes. Research conducted in Central Kalimantan's rural areas, such as orangutan observation or rainforest ecotourism, concentrates around larger, more accessible villages and centers, rather than small villages like Tamparak Layung. Such small villages are visited primarily by anthropological or ethnographic researchers or those interested in alternative tourism forms, who wish to gain insight into traditional communities' lifestyles and the everyday reality of rural Kalimantan.
Summary
Tamparak Layung is a small village in Dusun Utara District of Barito Selatan Regency, reflecting the characteristic image of rural Central Kalimantan. It is not a tourist destination, and its real estate market activity is likewise modest. The village is characterized by subsistence economy and community self-organization, which can serve as an adequate base for those seeking authentic rural Kalimantan experience and community engagement, but does not constitute a suitable place for organized hotel industry or larger economic development.

