Berua – urban area in Makassar's northern district, South Sulawesi Province
Berua is an urban settlement in South Sulawesi (Sulawesi Selatan) Province in Indonesia, belonging to the Biringkanaya kecamatan (district) and administratively classified as part of Makassar city. Based on its geographic coordinates (–5.1114° S, 119.4303° E), it is situated in the northern areas of the city. Makassar itself is located on the southwestern coast of Celebes (Sulawesi) island near the Makassar Strait, serving as an urban center that ranks as the largest city in East Indonesia and the fifth largest urban center in the country. Berua's immediate proximity to this dynamically developing metropolitan zone determines the general characteristics of the region.
General overview
Berua itself does not possess widely documented, independent identifying features in publicly accessible, verified sources; based on available data, the settlement forms part of the Biringkanaya kecamatan, which is one of Makassar's northern administrative units. According to information available at the broader district and city level, Makassar's total area is 175.77 square kilometers, and the city had approximately 1.474 million residents as of mid-2023. The Biringkanaya district is counted among the relatively less densely built northern parts of the agglomeration, where urban expansion has gradually advanced over recent decades. The lives of residents here are primarily influenced by the infrastructure characteristics typical of Makassar as a whole and the metropolitan labor market. The official agglomeration area known as Mamminasata – which encompasses 33 additional districts in neighboring regencies besides Makassar – covers 2,666.63 square kilometers and is home to more than 2.795 million people according to 2023 estimates, which clearly illustrates the scale of the urban unit of which Berua's region forms a part.
Real estate and investment
Settlement-level real estate market data for Berua are not available from verified sources; therefore, the broader urban and provincial context is presented below. According to Bank Indonesia data, Makassar produces Indonesia's second-highest commercial real estate prices, surpassed only by the Greater Jakarta agglomeration. This broader urban dynamic naturally influences the real estate market framework in the Biringkanaya district and thus in Berua's region, where urban expansion and infrastructure developments may increase territorial value in the longer term. Makassar's classification in national development policy is also significant: the National Development Planning Agency (Bappenas) counts it as one of the country's four priority cities, alongside Jakarta, Surabaya, and Medan. This strategic role may strengthen real estate demand within the city over the longer term. As general information, it should be noted that in Indonesia, foreign nationals' opportunities to acquire land ownership are legally restricted: full ownership rights (Hak Milik) can be acquired exclusively by Indonesian citizens, while foreigners typically operate within long-term rental arrangements (Hak Sewa) or other frameworks established by law regarding their real estate usage rights.
Safety and security
No available, verified settlement-level data exists regarding safety and security in Berua. Concerning the broader region, namely Makassar's general security situation, it can be said that the city, as a prominent economic and cultural center in East Indonesia, faces public security challenges typical of complex metropolitan environments. For travelers, it is generally advisable to exercise heightened vigilance at busier points in large cities, particularly at transportation hubs and in public spaces. Local and provincial-level police (Polri) operate in the area; however, authenticated, comparable data on specific effectiveness indicators is not available in this source material. To conduct a specific security assessment of the Biringkanaya district and Berua's immediate surroundings, it is advisable to consult local, up-to-date sources.
Tourist attractions
Named tourist attractions cannot be identified from verified sources within Berua's immediate area. The broader vicinity, namely Makassar city, however, is home to numerous historically and culturally significant sites documented in sources, stemming from the city's history. Makassar was once the capital of the Gowa Sultanate, then functioned as a Portuguese naval base before being conquered by the Dutch East India Company (VOC) in the 17th century. The 1950 Makassar Uprising, linked to the city's history, also qualifies as part of modern Indonesian history. The city's port and commercial heritage, along with related cultural sites, are found primarily in the city center and southern urban areas, accessible from Berua's northern location by car or local public transportation. Regarding specific attractions and their precise distances from Berua, it is advisable to rely on local sources and up-to-date map information.
Summary
Berua is an urban area belonging to the Biringkanaya District in Makassar's northern region of South Sulawesi Province. In the absence of independent, verified data about the place, an understanding of it is formed primarily through the broader urban context: Makassar is a defining metropolitan center of East Indonesia, with prominent commercial real estate indicators and strategic classification in development policy. Berua's region is to be understood within this metropolitan framework and is inseparable from its dynamics, infrastructure endowments, and market processes.

