Skip to main content
RunningCrews
Running Rage Has Been Moving Through Jakarta Since 2011
Crew Story

Running Rage Has Been Moving Through Jakarta Since 2011

RunningCrews Editorial5 min read
Back to The Pulse

A Crew That Simply Would Not Stop

Most things that start in 2011 do not make it to the present decade. Trends fade, groups splinter, enthusiasm cools. Running Rage, born in Jakarta at the very start of that year, chose a different path. Quietly, without fanfare, the crew kept showing up. Tuesday evenings, Thursday evenings, Sunday mornings, week after week, year after year. That kind of consistency is not an accident. It is the product of something genuine at the foundation, a real belief that running is not just a sport to be picked up and put down, but a way of living. Jakarta is one of Southeast Asia's most kinetic cities, a place of constant motion and noise, and Running Rage found its rhythm inside all of that. Thirteen-plus years on, the crew still anchors its week around the same runs, the same neighbourhoods, the same commitment. That alone tells you something important about who they are.

The Vision Behind Running Rage

Running Rage was founded by Adystra Bimo, and the philosophy he built the crew around has never been complicated. Three words sit at the heart of everything: running, lifestyle, the great outdoors. There is an intentional simplicity to that framing. Running Rage was never designed to be a racing club chasing podiums, nor a wellness brand packaging fitness into something polished and curated. It was designed to be a living practice, something you integrate into the fabric of daily life rather than schedule around it. The great outdoors piece matters too. In a city as dense and urban as Jakarta, the idea of connecting with open space, fresh air, and physical movement carries real weight. Running Rage gives its members a reason to step outside three times a week and be present in their bodies and in their city. Adystra understood from the beginning that running done this way, as a lifestyle rather than a programme, tends to stick. The crew's longevity is the proof.

Senayan as a Home Ground

Jakarta's Senayan district is one of the city's most recognisable landmarks for sport and movement. Home to the Gelora Bung Karno sports complex, wide pedestrian paths, and the commercial energy of FX Sudirman, Senayan draws runners naturally. Running Rage has made this area its operational centre, and the choice is fitting. The district offers the kind of infrastructure that makes regular running accessible: relatively flat routes, recognisable meeting points, and a community atmosphere that especially on weekend mornings fills the paths with people in motion. FX Senayan, the lifestyle mall and plaza at the edge of the complex, serves as the Sunday morning gathering point, a spot known to any Jakarta runner worth their salt. The midweek runs on Tuesday and Thursday evenings convene in the broader Senayan area, giving members flexibility while keeping the group anchored to familiar ground. There is something reassuring about a crew that has its place, a neighbourhood it has claimed over years of returning to the same corners and the same stretches of tarmac.

Three Runs a Week Every Week

The weekly structure of Running Rage is one of its most defining features. Three sessions, spread across the week, means that running is never allowed to become something you only do when you feel motivated. Tuesday at 18:30 in the Senayan area. Thursday at 18:30, again in Senayan. Sunday at 06:45 at FX Senayan. The rhythm is deliberate: two midweek evening sessions to break up the working week, and one early Sunday morning run to start the weekend with intention. The evening runs catch people after office hours, tapping into the particular energy of Jakarta at dusk when the heat of the day has softened and the city is transitioning into its evening pace. The Sunday morning run operates on a different register altogether. 6:45 AM in Senayan as the city is still waking up is a different Jakarta than the one most people see. Quieter roads, cooler air, the hazy orange light over the complex. Running Rage has been meeting at that hour, at that spot, for over a decade.

Running as a Long Game

What Running Rage represents in the broader landscape of Jakarta's running culture is a kind of institutional memory. The crew pre-dates the global running crew boom. It was built before run clubs became a lifestyle category, before every major brand launched a running community, before the language of crew culture entered mainstream conversation. Adystra started this in 2011 because he believed in running and in the idea that doing it with others made it better. That founding instinct has held. The crew's tagline, still running, carries more meaning than it might appear to on the surface. It is not just a statement of continuity. It is a quiet declaration of character. In a city and a culture that moves fast and reinvents itself constantly, Running Rage has remained itself. The runs are the same. The ethos is the same. The commitment to being outside, moving, and doing it together is the same. For anyone who has ever tried to maintain a running habit alone, that kind of community infrastructure is worth more than it is easy to measure.

Joining Running Rage in Jakarta

Getting involved with Running Rage is straightforward. The crew runs three times a week on a consistent schedule, and the meeting points in the Senayan area are easy to find for anyone familiar with central Jakarta. Sunday mornings at FX Senayan at 06:45 are a good entry point, the hour early enough to feel like a real commitment but the location welcoming and well-known. The midweek evening runs on Tuesday and Thursday at 18:30 offer a different energy, ideal for those whose weekends are complicated but who want running to be a regular part of their week. Running Rage's Instagram account, @runningrage, is the best place to follow the crew's activity, check for any schedule updates, and get a feel for who these people are before showing up. The crew has been doing this since 2011. They know how to welcome a new face and they know how to run. Those two things together are a good reason to come out on a Tuesday evening and see what over a decade of consistent movement looks like from the inside.

Featured Crew

R

RunningCrews Editorial

RunningCrews.com

More Stories