Kuala Lumpur

Long one of the fastest-growing cities in Southeast Asia, Kuala Lumpur is the national capital and largest city of Malaysia. Kuala Lumpur is an administrative center of Selangor, one of the country’s 13 states. Kuala Lumpur is in the south-central part of the Malay Peninsula, near the west coast. It lies at the junction of the Gombak and the Kelang rivers. The Kelang provides a waterway westward to the Strait of Malacca, 25 miles (40 kilometers) away. Across the strait is the Indonesian island of Sumatra. The city is built on hilly land near equatorial rain forests.

Chinese and Malays comprise most of the population of Kuala Lumpur. There are also many people of Indian and European origin. The varied backgrounds of Kuala Lumpur’s inhabitants are reflected in the city’s architectural mix of Chinese shops, Muslim minarets, and modern skyscrapers. At 1,483 feet (452 meters), the two Petronas office towers were the world’s tallest buildings when they were completed in 1998. Among the city’s other landmarks are the National Museum, the gigantic National Mosque, and two sports stadiums. The 20-story Parliament House is part of a complex of government buildings. These are surrounded by Chinese two-story wooden shop houses and mixed residential areas of kampongs (villages), modern bungalows, and brick homes. The exclusive Kenney Hill sector is a showcase for domestic architecture.

Kuala Lumpur is a commercial, cultural, and transportation center in an area rich in tin and rubber. It has access to deepwater shipping facilities at Port Kelang, at the mouth of the Kelang River. Light industry abounds in Kuala Lumpur proper as well as in Petaling Jaya, a satellite industrial area. The industrial sector of Sungai Besi (Iron River) has iron foundries and engineering works and processes food, soap, and margarine. The Sentil and Ipoh Road area is the site of railway and engineering workshops and sawmills. Cement is manufactured at Rawang to the north, and small-scale tin smelting and rubber processing are also common in the area.

The Banganun Sultan Abdul Samad, or High Court building, is one of Kuala Lumpur’s most notable examples of colonial architecture. Completed in 1897, it was originally called the Selangor State Secretariat and housed the state government offices.

Immigrant Chinese tin miners founded Kuala Lumpur in the mid-1800s. Since 1895 it has been the capital, successively, of the Federated Malay States, the Federation of Malaya, and Malaysia. Most of its expansion has taken place since 1950. In 1972 Kuala Lumpur was designated a municipality and in 1974 an area of 94 square miles (243 square kilometers), including the municipality, was designated the Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur.



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