Bandung, the capital of West Java and Indonesia’s fourth-largest city, according to 2023 population data, is home to more than 2.5 million residents, including nearly 770,000 young people aged 15 to 29, around 30% of its population. A vibrant cultural hub known for its creativity and civic spirit, Bandung is also regarded as one of the safer major cities in Indonesia. Over the past decade, the city has strengthened youth participation through platforms such as the Bandung Youth Forum, established in 2014, and the Bandung Youth Parliament, launched in 2016. The journey toward complete safety continues, as young people in the city partake in solutions to improve public spaces, support community wellbeing, and strengthen Bandung’s culture of shared responsibility.
In Bandung, the survey of perception of safety among young people revealed that urban environmental issues are the leading drivers of safety concerns, particularly waste disposal, unsafe roads and public spaces, and heavy traffic.
Tackling these issues with young people, local partner World Resources Institute (WRI) Indonesia implemented the programme’s innovation engine through two Ideathons, each a four-day sprint inviting citywide ideas to make Bandung safer and more liveable. Local partners organised project management and business development bootcamps for S²Cities youth partners, equipping them to design and deliver their own initiatives. Local placemaking experts guided place-based projects, many of which directly tackled the environmental and safety challenges identified in the city.
Complementing these innovation-driven efforts, the programme strengthens youth participation through digital integration and data-led planning. Bandung’s adaptive systems model, operationalised through the Ushahidi platform, a citizen-driven data tool, trainsand enables young people and public officials to collect, map, and analyse safety data to inform the city’s Liveable City Initiative, providing crucial geolocated data for infrastructure planning and management.
Two years after the city joined the programme, the youth-led organisation Kami Ruang Ketiga (KRK), born from the first Ideathon, has taken over the role of local implementing partner to scale placemaking projects and sustain Bandung’s youth-led momentum toward safer, more inclusive public spaces.





