Sungai Besi

Coordinates: 3°03′N 101°42′E / 3.050°N 101.700°E / 3.050; 101.700
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Aerial view of Sungai Besi town
Tin mining in Sungai Besi circa 1910.

Sungai Besi (formerly known as Sungei Besi) (English: Steel River) is a town and suburb within the Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur. The federal constituency of Sungai Besi existed from 1974 to 1995. Sungai Besi was a historical mining town with many heavy industries such as steelworks, waste steel plants and other steel industries. Sungei Besi Tin Mine site was the largest and deepest open cast alluvial tin mine in the world and in Malaysia. The town has since developed from a large area of village settlements.

Background and progress[edit]

The town is still in its original settings. The village structures are from the early days of the town. Most of the buildings are built from wood and the pathways are narrow. There is also a modest century-old Chinese temple ( 仙四師爺廟(新街場) ) which is founded in 1901 inside the town area.

The vibrant area of Sungai Besi is located within the shops and the area near with the police station. Sungai Besi has many street vendors and traders in wet markets who sell mostly food items and fruits.

The Sungei Besi Tin Mine site was once upon a time the largest and deepest open cast alluvial tin mine in the world, as deep as 100 metres in some parts of the pit and with dangerously unstable slopes. Today, the site has been developed and occupied by Mines Wellness City.[1]

Sungai Besi is also known for the Sungai Besi Airport (Simpang Airport) which was once the main airport for Kuala Lumpur until 1965, where it got relocated to Subang International Airport. The airport then housed the RMAF Museum and the Sungai Besi Air Base. It was used by the Royal Malaysian Air Force as well as the Police, Fire and Rescue services for aviation purposes until it ceased operations in early 2018 to make way for the construction of MRT stations and Bandar Malaysia development project.[2][3]

A refugee camp for Vietnamese boat people was set up in Sungai Besi in 1982. It was consisted of two camp sites, one of which the location was approximately where Astro Bukit Jalil is situated today. The camp was officially closed in 1996 with the repatriation of 22 boat people to Hanoi, the last batch of refugees to leave Malaysia.

Accessibility and transport[edit]

The township is easily accessible from the North–South Expressway Southern Route. The road into the township is only 400 metres from the Sungai Besi Expressway exit.

The main road in Sungai Besi is Jalan Suasa which is the main trading centre. Sometimes, it is packed with heavy vehicles and cars of many tourists who are in town to enjoy Sungai Besi's famed seafood.

The township is also served by the  SP16   PY29  Sungai Besi station on the 4 Sri Petaling LRT line and 12 Putrajaya MRT line.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "History of Mines Wellness City Resort". Mines Wellness City. 2 April 2014. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  2. ^ Mohd Azam Shah Yaacob (16 March 2018). "SG Besi RMAF Base Ceases Operation". New Straits Times. Archived from the original on 21 January 2023. Retrieved 24 July 2023 – via PressReader.
  3. ^ "Bandar Malaysia – New Central Business District and transport hub in Kuala Lumpur". Future Southeast Asia. 21 March 2020. Retrieved 14 August 2021.

3°03′N 101°42′E / 3.050°N 101.700°E / 3.050; 101.700