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English: Map of w:Kuala Lumpur divided according to constituencies with highways (black) and major roads (red). City centre is marked by a Star Button and constituency towns marked by Red Buttons. City centre is marked by a Star Button and constituency towns marked by Red Buttons.
Module:Location map/data/Malaysia Kuala Lumpur subdistrict; Module:Location map/data/Malaysia Kuala Lumpur subdistrict/doc; Usage on uz.wikipedia.org Module:Location map/data/Malaysia Kuala Lumpur subdistrict; Module:Location map/data/Malaysia Kuala Lumpur subdistrict/doc; Usage on zh.wikipedia.org 吉隆坡
Jalan Pudu is a major road in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. [1] According to the Department of Survey and Mapping, Kuala Lumpur is divided into sections and, smaller still, into lots. A map of Kuala Lumpur from 1895 places Pudu (or Pudoh , as it was back then) in a vast swampy area far from the administrative capital where Sultan Abdul Samad Building ...
Inokom is the licensed contract assembler for Hyundai, BMW and Mazda passenger vehicles in Malaysia. Inokom's shareholders include Sime Darby Motors (51%), Sime Darby Hyundai (5%), Hyundai Motor Company (15%) and Berjaya Auto (29%). [134] Inokom became the first to produce the Hyundai Ioniq outside Korea.
The 26 km (16 mi)-long expressway links the Kuala Lumpur City Centre with the Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA) in Sepang, Selangor. The expressway is a backbone of the Multimedia Super Corridor (MSC) area. [1] The Kilometre Zero is located at Kampung Pandan Interchange, Kuala Lumpur, just outside the Tun Razak Exchange.
STAR-LRT was first conceived in the 1981 Transport Master Plan, when the Malaysian government proposed a network of LRT lines connecting Kuala Lumpur city centre with the surrounding areas. An agreement was signed between the government and STAR in 1992. [4] The original system (27.4 km (17.0 mi)) consists of 25 stations built in two phases.
The Klang Valley Mass Rapid Transit project is a planned three-line mass rapid transit (MRT) system in the Klang Valley (Greater Kuala Lumpur), an urban conurbation in Malaysia which includes the capital city of Kuala Lumpur. [1] The MRT lines, when completed, would be operated as components of the Klang Valley Integrated Transit System.
The MRT line covers a span of 47 kilometres (29 mi) from Kwasa Damansara to Kajang, passing the Kuala Lumpur city centre where the alignment goes underground. [citation needed] The line serves a corridor with 1.2 million residents within the Klang Valley region from the northwest to the southeast of Kuala Lumpur.