CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION 1.0 Introduction Kuala Lumpur was built in 1857 at Kuala Sungai Gombak and Klang. In Malay, the name literally means "muddy estuary". The settlement began when a member of the Selangor royal family, Raja Abdullah, upon the Klang Valley for tin prospectors. 87 Chinese prospectors went up the river Klang and began prospecting in the Ampang area, which was then a wilderness. While 69 of them conked out because of the disease outbreak, growing tin mine was built. This attracted merchants who traded basic provisions to the miners to take some of the canister. Traders set up shop at the conflux of the Klang and Gombak rivers. Thus, a city born. The history of Kuala Lumpur is also strongly correlated with Haji Abdullah Hukum, who was one of the commander of the state government. Kuala Lumpur has grown rapidly since the speedy growth of Asian economies in the early 1990s (when the mediocre economic growth of 10%). Skyscrapers are built and Kuala Lumpur, container colonial outposts lifeless, has become one of the busiest cities, developed and motivated in Southeast Asia. Most of the center of KL has grown up without using the central program. Most centers not withstanding, the streets of older urban areas are very small, winding and traffic congestion. The architecture in this part is sort of a unique colonial, European and Chinese hybrid form. For the main golden city of Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur is the main attraction in Malaysia, therefore it must be polish the main charms of the city. As stated in the Kuala Lumpur Draft Structure Plan 2020, one of the goals is to transform the Kuala Lumpur as the centre of the international commercial and financial line, as it will call a world class city of Kuala Lumpur.... ... middle of paper ... ...cted will be processed. This is very important in verifying and analyzing the preferences of office occupiers for criteria selecting the office space. Here, the researcher will conclude all the primary data such as questionnaire and interview and it will be analyzed by a suitable table like histogram, flow charts and others. It is also discussing about the result with recommendation and also draw conclusions. The data will analyze by use the computer system included the Microsoft Excel software in order to generate the result. Chapter 5- CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATION The conclusion will be concluding to the whole project. It is where it shows that did the research project meeting its aim and is there any recommendation made due to the research data collected. In this chapter 5 it also focuses on the further research that will be made and summarizing the result.
One of the most interesting indigenous groups in the world is the Batek of Malaysia, this is a group of people that live in the oldest rain forest of peninsular Malaysia. Orang ASli means “Original people” in the native Malay Language, and they truly are the original people of the land. Being a nomadic group of hunters and gatherers, means that they are at the mercy of the land and the elements for survival. Batek beliefs note that, the rainforest was created by “superhuman” beings for the Batek to use and will destroy the world and everything on it if the Batek were ever to leave the rainforest ( K.M. Endcott 1979a; Lye 2004). The Batek believe that the “superhuman” beings created the forest for the Batek to harvest, build houses in, and provide also to decorations for their ceremonial rituals.
2. Your conclusion paragraph should be more detailed. Restate in just a few sentences the points that you made in your paper and what conclusions you have drawn from those points.
Cities by John Reader, the acclaimed historian attempts to dive readers deep into the territory of urban historians, depicting and analyzing the greatest cities of planet earth. From the earliest examples of cities to the ultra modern cities, 7000-9000 years later, of Mumbai or Tokyo, Reader paints the picture loud and clear. Cities around the globe are home to half of the entire planets population! Those living in cities, consume nearly 75% of all natural resources in the entire world. From the ruins of the earliest cities to the present, Reader will explore how cities develop and thrive, how they can decline and die, how they remake themselves. In the beginning of chapter two, Reader states, “The first cities are said to have arisen from rural communities whose intensified farming practices produced surpluses large enough to free craft workers and other specialists from working on the land (Reader 10).” With that being said, the first cities were basically an intensification of agriculture. He starts with extreme detail describing the “oldest-known cities” from around 9000 years ago. Starting with the claimed first city Çatal Hüyük. This was a large Turkish neolithic site, has been described as the world's first city. Stretching back over 9000 years, at times up to 10,000 people might have lived there. As Reader stated, the site was discovered in 1958 by the British archaeologist James Mellaart. He was unsure in categorizing Catal Huyuk as a city or a town. From what we think as of a city today, like New York or Paris, classifying Catal Huyuk as a city can be difficult. Catal Huyuk was a settlement in southern Anatolia, which existed from approximately 7500 BC to 5700 BC. Certainly it is a site of immense historic and social...
Malaysia is located in the south-eastern Asia, bordering Thailand and northern one-third of the island of Borneo, bordering Indonesia, Brunei, and the South China Sea, south of Vietnam. Due to its locations, it has been colonised since the late 18th centuries by many countries. Since 1965, Malaysia has had one of the best economic records in Asia, with GDP average of 6.5% growth for almost 50 years. The economical development especially boosted during 1981 and 2003 under the governance of Prime Minister Mahathir bin Mohamad. Malaysia succeeded in diversifying its economy from dependence on exports of raw materials to expansion in manufacturing, services, and tourism. Also, the current Prime Minister continues to pursue pro-business policies .
The data collected will be analysed and interpreted. The summary of the findings, suggestions and the conclusion will be given in the report.
The target market for Penang Port is shippers in Malaysia northern states and southern provinces of Thailand. The port acts as a main entrance to Malaysia, and is the longest established port in Malaysia. The port is situated along the straits of Malacca which is known to be one of the hectic shipping routes in the world which allowing it to receive many services handling.
...e person). The Johore-Singapore Causeway which connects Malaya and Singapore was completed in 1922. New cities were built due to mining such as Kuala Lumpur, Ampang, Taiping and Ipoh.
We will find out how Singapore manage to raises it economic development in such rapid growth aftermath of war and separation.
Malaysia have a Malay culture, a Chinese culture, an Indian culture , a Eurasian culture, along with the cultures. the peninsula and north Borneo. A unified Malaysian culture is something only emerging in the country. The important social distinction in the emergent national culture is between Malay and non-Malay, represented by two groups: the Malay elite that dominates the country's politics, and the largely Chinese middle class whose prosperous lifestyle leads Malaysia's shift to a consumer society. The two groups mostly stay in the urban areas of the Malay Peninsula's west coast, and their sometimes competing, sometimes parallel effect shape the shared life of Malaysia's citizens. Sarawak and Sabah, the two Malaysian states located in north Borneo, tend to be less a influential part of the national culture.
Shatkin, G. (January 01, 2014). Reinterpreting the Meaning of the ‘Singapore Model’: State Capitalism and Urban Planning. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 38, 1, 116-137.
In this section, he explained that urbanization happened in two stages. First stage cities were confined and limited to the valleys and food plains, like the Nile, the Fertile Crescent, the Indus and Hwang Ho. The second stage is the urban dominance, where cities are in full expansion, performance and influence. He concluded that population growth and technical improvement are factors of this change.
Malaysia biggest problem is the environmental pollution. Although people already know how harmful these things are but they still go on. The three main pollution that happen in Malaysia are air pollution, water pollution and land pollution. Mostly pollution effect by the air conditional that release CFC’s gasses, rubbish that been thrown to the rival and open burning. All of this pollution will be link to all kind of diseases, sickness, bacteria and virus. For an example lung cancer that will happen to people cause by breathing the polluted air that been create by Malaysian themselves.
Looking back on the history of Singapore its hard not to sit back and rivet at all the progression and improvement that have made Singapore a more relaxing and astonishing haven and must-see destination. Starting chronologically, from the Sanskrit words “simha” (lion) and “pura” (city) Singapore or Singapura, the “lion City” shows the rich history and the beginning of a new era that Singapore went through, and describes the city-state and the city life of people whom live or visit Singapore. We then move into how the city-state flourished as a trading post for a lot of sea vessels, which include Chinese junks, Portuguese battleships, and Indian vessels. The nineteenth century was an important time for Singapore because it was when modern Singapore was founded. On January 29, 1819 Sir Thomas Raffles (the...
Tugu Negara was the interesting place that has the history is distinctive. It located in capital, Kuala Lumpur near Parliament building. The monument picture body of troops that flying the country flag namely Jalur Gemilang. From 2010, Hari Pahlawan celebration location displaced from Tugu Negara to Putrajaya, celebrated on 1 July every year. Cultural of heritage that exist in Kuala Lumpur very attractive tourist's attention from foreign countries. Foreign tourist admire historical value that still
The chapter of discussion was composed of five parts: introduction, reflection on the project, reflection on implications of the project, reflection of the MA experience, and summary.