Maipe – small Bornean village in Paju Epat district, Barito Timur regency
Maipe is a settlement in Indonesia's Kalimantan Tengah (Central Kalimantan) province, situated within the interior areas of Borneo island. Administratively, it falls under Paju Epat district (kecamatan), which is part of Barito Timur regency (kabupaten). The provincial capital is Palangka Raya, and the province itself is one of Indonesia's largest by area, covering 153,564.50 km². Based on Maipe's coordinates (-2.07°S, 115.06°E), the settlement lies in the eastern part of the province, near the broader Barito River watershed. Direct, settlement-level data is not available in public sources, so the village is presented below within the broader regional context—that of the province and regency—based on generally reliable information.
General overview
Maipe does not feature among widely known Indonesian tourism or economic destinations, and detailed settlement-level demographic or infrastructural data about it cannot be found in available public databases. Paju Epat district, as part of Barito Timur regency, is located in the eastern strip of Central Kalimantan, characterized typically by dense rainforest landscape, river networks, and relatively low population density. According to the 2020 census data for Kalimantan Tengah province, the entire province had a population of 2,669,969 people, which represents a proportionally smaller population relative to the country's total area—this well reflects the generally sparse settlement patterns of Borneo's interior regions. The province comprises a total of 13 regencies and 1 city-level administrative unit; Barito Timur is one of them. Such small interior villages typically derive their livelihoods from agriculture, forestry, and the traditional Dayak community lifestyle characteristic of Borneo, though direct verification of this for Maipe is not possible from available sources.
Real estate and investment
Direct, settlement-level data on Maipe's real estate market is not available, so the analysis below must rely on general economic and real estate market characteristics of Barito Timur regency and Kalimantan Tengah province. In Central Kalimantan's interior areas, real estate transactions are typically low in intensity, with local land prices and transactions primarily reflecting the needs of local communities and differing substantially from the markets of the province's larger cities, particularly Palangka Raya. Economic activity in the region is mainly determined by the extraction of natural resources—including coal mining and palm oil production—which in certain areas attract infrastructural development, though no verifiable data exists regarding direct impacts on Maipe. In Indonesia, foreign nationals generally cannot acquire direct land ownership (Hak Milik); long-term lease structures (such as Hak Sewa or Hak Pakai) are available to them—this legal framework applies throughout the country and is not limited to any single region. From an investor perspective, Maipe and its surrounding area cannot currently be classified as a dynamically developing, capital-attracting real estate destination; accessibility and infrastructural conditions of Barito Timur regency are determining factors for potential investors.
Safety and security
Settlement-level crime statistics or official data on Maipe's public safety are not available. In general, interior rural areas of Central Kalimantan—such as the Paju Epat district region—experience organized crime as a less determining factor than in the country's busier urban centers. Neither domestic nor international security services maintain special security alerts for the province as a whole. Everyday public safety in rural Bornean regions is generally influenced by traditional community norms and local-level conflict resolution mechanisms, though the quality and current state of these factors cannot be verified for Maipe based on available sources. For newcomers—as in other less-explored rural areas of Indonesia—basic caution and prior acquaintance with local conditions are recommended.
Tourist attractions
No publicly available source contains named tourist attractions with direct appeal or notable sites in Maipe. Paju Epat district and Barito Timur regency represent one of Central Kalimantan's least tourism-oriented interior areas; the natural characteristics typical of the province as a whole—extensive tropical rainforests, river systems, Bornean flora and fauna—theoretically offer possibilities for nature tourism and ecotourism, yet no source-verified data exists regarding specific, location-bound offerings in Maipe. Within the broader Kalimantan Tengah province, known and visited destinations—such as Palangka Raya city itself or Tanjung Puting National Park (located in the more western part of the province, in Kotawaringin Barat regency)—lie several hundred kilometers away from Maipe. For those interested in authentic, tourist-infrastructure-free Bornean rural life, the Paju Epat district area as a whole may offer distinctive cultural and natural experiences, though visitors would best explore these on-site with local guidance.
Summary
Maipe is a small, publicly barely documented settlement in Central Kalimantan province, within Paju Epat district of Barito Timur regency. The province is one of Indonesia's largest by area—exceeding 153,000 km²—with a 2020 population of approximately 2.7 million people, yet its interior rural areas, including the Maipe region, belong to the category of lesser-known, small-scale Bornean villages. Settlement-level data on real estate markets, tourism, and public safety are not available; statements about the region rely on general characteristics of the province and regency. Maipe may be primarily relevant for those wishing to connect with the authentic, rural interior regions of Central Kalimantan.

