By day, the unforgiving sun glares off the road beside Ipah's wooden home with blinding brightness as a passing motorbike stirs a swirl of dust.
By night, the beams of an occasional truck carrying coal or palm fruits pierce the darkness.
This remote corner of Indonesia is set to be transformed from a forest backwater on the island of Borneo to a global city — a new capital of a country whose 260 million people make it the world's fourth most populous.
Muslim children react as they play outside a mosque. Reuters
At her stall serving ice tea and instant noodles, Ipah, an 18-year-old single mother, worries about what the change will bring.
"Cities in Kalimantan are peaceful and safe," said Ipah, who like many Indonesians uses only one name, referring to the Indonesian part of Borneo Island.
"The capital is a city that never sleeps. Too much smoke, too much fuss."
Women sit at departure hall of Sultan Aji Muhammad Sulaiman Sepinggan International Airport. Reuters
The capital Jakarta's reputation as a crowded, polluted mega city of more than 10 million people - one that is slowly sinking into the sea - is partly why Indonesia plans to move government offices to a "Forest City" in East Kalimantan province.
The logic of the plan, first mooted nearly 70 years ago, is also to escape Java's earthquake risk and to swing Indonesia's political centre nearer the middle of the archipelago and away from the politically dominant island.
Ipah, who is a local resident in Semboja district, sits on a bench. Reuters
"Within five years, we think there will be 200,000 to 300,000 people. Within 10 years, maybe the population will reach 1 million. And then after that 1.5 million," Planning Minister Bambang Brodjonegoro told Reuters in Jakarta.
"We will manage the growth of the city so that it doesn't wildly expand out of control," he said.
LONG-STANDING DREAM
People unload a motorbike from a wooden boat. Reuters
By identifying the site for the yet-to-be-named capital last week, President Joko Widodo - known as Jokowi - got closer than ever to realising a move now set to start in 2024.
"Our people are grateful, Alhamdulilah (praise be to God)," said Abdul Gafur Mas'ud, regent of North Penajam Paser. "This regency has been considered undeveloped."
The congratulatory bouquets arrayed at his office are as bright as the mood in town since the decision.
Ships are pictured near Semayang port in Balikpapan, East Kalimantan province, Indonesia. Reuters
Many residents spoke of their hopes for better schools and paved roads, for clean, piped water and reliable electricity.
But after initial celebrations, worries are also surfacing that land speculation will drive up prices, and over an influx of outsiders competing for jobs and over environmental destruction.
"Our people must prepare quickly," said Awang Yacoub Luthman, secretary of the Kutai Kartanegara Ing Martadipura Sultanate, who has migration at the top of his list of worries.
A worker pushes a trolley next to a park decoration at Sultan Aji Muhammad Sulaiman Sepinggan International Airport.
LAND WORRIES
The region's Tribun Kaltim newspaper said asking prices for land surged four times after the announcement.
That said, Bagus Susetyo, local chairman of the Real Estate Indonesia property association, told Reuters major property companies were not acquiring land because they had large land banks in nearby Balikpapan.
While some would gain from the rise in land prices, many Indonesians don't own the land they live on.
A boy plays outside a coffee shop at Sepaku district in North Penajam Paser regency. Reuters
Among them is Ipah, who is already resigned to losing her dwelling, protected against bad luck by two diamond-shaped charms woven from young coconut leaves.
"Mr Jokowi, can you give me free land, even just a square metre or a free house?" she asked.
It is not only human homes at risk.
East Kalimantan is known for forests inhabited by orangutans, sun bears and long-nosed monkeys.
There will be no building in protected forest and the government plans to reforest abandoned mines and illegal palm oil plantations, Planning Minister Brodjonegoro said.
The fate of the apes is particularly sensitive in Indonesia given that they have become symbols for campaigners targeting the world's biggest palm oil industry over the destruction of forests for plantations.
Reuters