Jalan Sultan Azlan Shah, Kuala Lumpur

Jalan Sultan Azlan Shah
(Jalan Ipoh)
Major junctions
North end: Jalan Ipoh
  Jalan Tuanku Abdul Halim (Jalan Duta)
Jalan Sentul
Kuala Lumpur Middle Ring Road 1
2 Genting Klang-Pahang Highway
Jalan Tuanku Abdul Rahman
Jalan Raja Muda Abdul Aziz
Southeast end: Kuala Lumpur
Chow Kit
Location
Primary
destinations:
Segambut
Sentul
Highway system

Jalan Sultan Azlan Shah is a major road in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. It was named after ninth Yang di-Pertuan Agong, Sultan Azlan Shah of Perak (1989 - 1994).

History

Jalan Sultan Azlan Shah used to be part of Jalan Ipoh. On 26 November 2014, the Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) renamed the stretch from the Jalan Segambut junction to the Jalan Pahang junction of Jalan Ipoh to Jalan Sultan Azlan Shah.[1]

Sultan Azlan Shah was the 34th Sultan of Perak, of which Ipoh is the capital.

List of junctions

kmExitJunctionsToRemarks
Start/End of separate carriageway
SegambutNorth
Jalan Ipoh
Kepong
Jinjang
Batu Caves

West
Jalan Segambut
Segambut

South
Jalan Tuanku Abdul Halim (Jalan Duta)
Jalan Duta
Hentian Duta
E1 New Klang Valley Expressway
Ipoh
Klang
Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA)
Johor Bahru
From north only
Start/End of separate carriageway
Taman Million
Kampung Kasipillay
Railway crossing bridge
Jalan PerhentianNortheast
Jalan Perhentian
KTM Sentul Railway Depot
Sentul Komuter station
T-junctions
Jalan SentulNorth
Jalan Sentul
Sentul
Batu
Gombak
E8 2 Kuantan
T-junctions
KLMRR1Kuala Lumpur Middle Ring Road 1
Jalan Tun Razak (Jalan Pekeliling)

Southwest
Ipoh
Petaling Jaya

East
KLCC
Ampang
E2 Seremban
E2 Melaka
E2 Johor Bahru
Diamond interchange
Jalan Raja LautJalan Raja Laut No entry
Kuala Lumpur
Chow Kit
North
2 Genting Klang-Pahang Highway
Jalan Pahang
Jalan Tun Razak (KLMRR 1)
Setapak
Kuantan

East
Jalan Raja Muda Abdul Aziz (Princes Road)
Kampung Baru
Jalan Tun Razak (MRR1)
Jalan Semarak

South
Jalan Tuanku Abdul Rahman (Batu Road)
Jalan Sultan Ismail (IRR)
Jalan Dang Wangi
Dataran Merdeka
Junctions

References

  1. Randhawa, Sharanpal Singh (25 November 2014). "9 KL roads renamed". New Straits Times. Kuala Lumpur. Retrieved 14 March 2015.


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.