Jalan Syed Putra

Part of Federal Route 2
Jalan Syed Putra
Route information
Existed: 1905 – present
History: Completed in 1908
Major junctions
North end: Kuala Lumpur
Bulatan Kinabalu
  1 Kuala Lumpur Inner Ring Road
Kuala Lumpur Middle Ring Road 1
Jalan Tun Sambanthan
2 Federal Highway
E37 East-West Link Expressway
2 Jalan Klang Lama
South end: Seputeh
Location
Primary
destinations:
Brickfields
Petaling Jaya
Shah Alam
Klang
Highway system

Jalan Syed Putra (formerly Lornie Drive), Federal Route 2 is a major highway in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. It was named after Almarhum Tuanku Syed Putra ibni Almarhum Syed Hassan Jamalullail of Perlis, the third Yang di-Pertuan Agong, which used to reside at Istana Negara which lies at one end of the highway.

Jalan Syed Putra was known as Lornie Drive during the British administration. It was named after J. Lornie, one of the British Residents of Selangor in the 1920s. Lornie was also the president of the Royal Selangor Golf Club in 1926.

Landmarks

At the helm of the highway is Wisma Tun Sambathan, which stands tall over the rest of the structures in the area. Surrounding the building are small banks and offices including the Darul Takaful Finance Area, which was the UMBC Bank building and then the Sime Darby Securities office.

Kuen Cheng Girls School, one of the country's top schools, sits next to Istana Negara, which is located in between Jalan Syed Putra and Jalan Kuching. Temples along b the road include the Yuen Tong Chee. There are many old shop houses along the road that cater to the local community in Robson Hill.

Further down the highway sits the KEMAS training centre that is facilitated by the Rural and Regional Development Ministry. The headquarters of the Selangor and Federal Territory Family Planning Association and the Malaysian International Youth Home are also along the road.

The Mid Valley Megamall that sits at the end of the highway.

Infrastructure

Along the highway runs Klang River, which has now been paved to support heavy monsoon rain and modern development.

Jalan Syed Putra is now connected to Jalan Tun Sambanthan through different roads while before it was only connected through a bridge across the Klang River.

List of interchanges and junctions

KmExitInterchangeToRemarks
Kuala Lumpur
Bulatan Kinabalu Roundabout
North
Jalan Sultan Mohammad ()
Jalan Hang Kasturi (Cecil Street)
Jalan Cheng Lock (Foch Avenue)
Central Market


1 Kuala Lumpur Inner Ring Road
Jalan Kinabalu (River Road)

Northwest
Ipoh
Jalan Raja
Jalan Raja Laut

Southeast
Stadium Merdeka
Stadium Negara
Cheras
Seremban
Roundabout
2 Jalan Syed Putra
Start/End of highway
Jalan Sultan Sulaiman JunctionsJalan Sultan Sulaiman (Sulaiman Road)

West
Jalan Tun Sambanthan (Brickfields Road)
Brickfields
Kuala Lumpur old railway station P&R
Masjid Negara

East
Stadium Merdeka
Stadium Negara
Cheras
Seremban
Junctions
Istana Negara, Jalan IstanaKuala Lumpur Middle Ring Road 1

West
Ipoh
Kuantan
KL Sentral P&R
Muzium Negara
Parliament House
Tugu Negara

East
Sungai Besi
Seremban
Istana Negara (Muzium Diraja)
Interchange
Klang bound
Maximum height limit 4.5 m
Kuen Cheng Girls SchoolKuen Cheng Girls School
U-TurnU-Turn
Jalan Robson ExitJalan Robson
Thean Hou Temple
Ramp off from Kuala Lumpur
Rebana Gateway Arch
Brickfields South InterchangeNorth
Jalan Tun Sambanthan (Jalan Brickfields)
Brickfields
KL Sentral P&R
Bangsar
Seputeh

Northeast
Jalan Robson
Thean Hou Temple
Parcelo interchange
Kuala Lumpur bound
Maximum height limit 4.5 m
Volvo InterchangeJalan 1/86

West
Lingkaran Syed Putra
Mid Valley City
Mid Valley Megamall
Zone A, B, C, D, E and F
Volvo
Mid Valley Komuter station
KTM Komuter

EAST
Seputeh
Interchange
Railway crossing bridge
EXIT 231 Seputeh InterchangeEast
E37 East-West Link Expressway
Cheras
Kajang
Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA)
Seremban
Melaka
Johor Bahru

West
2 Federal Highway
Bangsar
Petaling Jaya
Shah Alam
Klang

Southwest
E10 New Pantai Expressway
Bandar Sunway
Subang Jaya
Stacked interchange
2 Jalan Syed Putra
2 Jalan Klang Lama
South
2Jalan Klang Lama
Kuchai Lama
Taman OUG
Puchong

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.