Alhamdulillah sb pt juga tgk KL zaman dulu2....sb lahir tahu2 dah berubah KL ni...rasa mcm nk zaman dulu lak...bgs benang ini diwujudkan sb blh remaja zaman skr tgk KL mcm mn klu lagi bgs seluruh malaysia....tq
kukuh btl bangunan lama ni...bgs la x diruntuhkan.....
at least ada peninggalan sejarah...anak cucu boleh tgk...
dedulu jln clear je...x jem pon...
jln tar dia pon nmpk bersih....
aman damai jek...selamba naik beskal bagai...
salam semua... kepada peminat-peminat/ pecinta sejarah. pihak kami amat mengalu-alukan anda semua untuk datang ke Arkib Negara Malaysia bagi melihat koleksi sejarah negara yang amat banyak.. terdapat hampir 200,000 ribu keping gambar yang terdapat dalam koleksi simpanan Arkib... hehe... amik port promosi tempat kerja...
Farther up from the Pudu area is Peel Road ( Jalan Peel ) - photo circa 1950s. This was the main trunk road leading out of KL to the Southern part of the country pre 70s before the Loke Yew Highway and Seremban Highway were constructed.
Jalan dang wangi sewaktu 13 Mei
Nostalgia bebeno Jalan ni....Federal Highway...
Newly completed Federal Highway with the EPF building still in the progress of being built at the junction with Jalan Gasing 1962.
Long before Ampang Park, Sungai Wang, BB Plaza or the newest Pavilion shopping malls .. the colonial "Prestigious" shopping places were Whileaway Laidlam, John Little's and Robinson's Dept Store located at Mountbatten Road ( Jalan Tun Perak ) which managed to stay in business till the 1970s (photo) with the top 2 floors being converted into a Chinese restaurant and night club.
View from the steps leading up to MBS.
Sultan Street Railway Station signage is clearly displayed on the roof of the station. Directly in front of the station is Foch Avenue.
Farther away from MBS : Bukit Bintang Park aka BB Park
This site used to be Hollywood Park way back in the 1930s. Back then, this part of town was considered the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur. It was for precisely this reason that Pudu Prison (popularly called Pudu Jail) was built in 1895. Hollywood Park was later acquired by movie giants of the day, Shaw Brothers. It was upgraded to BB Park with a carnival-like setting: there were cabarets and dance halls, cinemas, stage shows, restaurants, game stalls and even a boxing ring! BB Park’s fortunes started to decline with the rising popularity of television and radio. It was closed in the early 1970s and redeveloped into Sungei Wang Plaza
Petaling Street taken in 1890s, facing the old Fui Chiu Clan Hall. The iron railings installed in front of the Fui Chiu Clan Hall is the evidence that the stream was still there at the time and also visible on the left in the photo is the mystical Guangdong style highrise