cover
Contact Name
Riyanto Haribowo
Contact Email
riyanto_haribowo@ub.ac.id
Phone
+62341-587710
Journal Mail Official
civense@ub.ac.id
Editorial Address
Badan Penerbitan Jurnal Fakultas Teknik Universitas Brawijaya Jln. MT. Haryono No.167, Malang, Jawa Timur – Indonesia, 65145 Telpon. (0341) 587710 / Fax. (0341) 551430
Location
Kota malang,
Jawa timur
INDONESIA
Civil and Environmental Science Journal (CIVENSE)
Published by Universitas Brawijaya
ISSN : -     EISSN : 26206218     DOI : https://doi.org/10.21776/ub.civense
Core Subject : Social, Engineering,
Civil and Environmental Science Journal (Civense) is an international journal, peer-reviewed research publication covering new concepts, theories, methods, and techniques related to science and engineering. The journal will cover, but is not limited to, the following topics: 1. Structural engineering 2. Construction management 3. Environmental engineering 4. Water resources and hydrologic engineering 5. Geotechnical engineering 6. Information technology 7. Coastal and harbor engineering 8. Surveying and geo-spatial engineering 9. Transportation engineering 10. Tunnel engineering 11. Construction materials
Articles 132 Documents
Spatial Performance Evaluation of Government Center: Economic Leakage Analysis Using Multiplier Effect Method in Mojokerto Regency Abbas, Mohammad Saichul; Wicaksono, Agus Dwi; Utomo, Dadang Meru; Munada, Wina
Civil and Environmental Science Journal (CIVENSE) Vol. 9 No. 1 (2026)
Publisher : Fakultas Teknik Universitas Brawijaya

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.21776/ub.civense.2026.009.01.5

Abstract

Placing a government capital in the wrong location does more than cause administrative headaches. It actively breaks the local economy. This study investigates the severe spatial mismatch in Mojokerto Regency, where its government center operates as an enclave entirely within Mojokerto City. We analyzed 2018–2023 GRDP data using Location Quotient (LQ), Shift-Share Analysis (SSA), and Keynesian Multiplier models. Our findings reveal a striking irony. The Regency’s bureaucracy actually functions as a basic sector for the neighboring City while remaining non-basic for its own territory. The SSA results prove this damage. Local tertiary sectors suffer heavy competitive losses because they miss out on the daily spending of civil servants. This enclave setup triggers massive economic leakage. Money drains out through direct office procurement and indirect daily consumption, creating a textbook backwash effect. Beyond lost revenue, this mismatch forces unsustainable daily commutes that heavily spike the region's carbon footprint. We conclude that relocating the government hub into the Regency’s actual borders is an urgent economic necessity, not just a political option. Until this physical relocation happens, local planners must consider cross-border revenue-sharing to stop the immediate financial bleeding. 
Revitalization and the Meaning of Space in Surabaya’s Old Town: The Rajawali – Kembang Jepun Corridor Witjaksono, Ninditarari Salsabila; Parlindungan, Johannes; Surjono, Surjono
Civil and Environmental Science Journal (CIVENSE) Vol. 9 No. 1 (2026)
Publisher : Fakultas Teknik Universitas Brawijaya

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.21776/ub.civense.2026.009.01.6

Abstract

Urban revitalization in historical cities usually focuses on physical upgrades and encouraging tourism, but there has not been much exploration of how these changes affect the meaning of space. This study examines how the revitalization of the Jalan Rajawali to Kembang Jepun corridor in Surabaya’s Old Town changes the feel of a place and how space is being used in that area. A qualitative descriptive approach was employed using field observation, stakeholder interviews, and spatial documentation. This research combines three analyses: typo-morphology, semiotic interpretation, and the production of a space framework to explore how physical structures, visual elements, and social practices interact after one year of revitalization. The result shows that 65% of the 136 buildings along the 1.13 km corridor experienced intervention of revitalization, affecting both heritage and nonheritage structures. Approximately 6,252 m² of land shifted from circulation and trade functions to adaptation, becoming a tourism and social public space. Although the basic morphological structure remains unchanged, facade handling, symbolic characteristics, pedestrian pathway improvements, and increased tourism activities have redefined the corridor as heritage tourism and a public space. This research shows that on Rajawali Street, it strengthens a monumental colonial identity, while on Kembang Jepun Street, it expresses a vibrant Chinatown character, creating a merging yet integrated spatial narrative. This research reveals that revitalization has a function as a process of spatial meaning production, in which physical interventions engage with collective memory and user perception. This approach combines typo-morphological and semiotic analysis to explain that heritage revitalization does not change the physical appearance of a place; it also shapes how people understand, experience, and give meaning to the space.