
kuala-lumpur
Entdecke Routen, Sehenswürdigkeiten und Reiseführer in Kuala Lumpur.
9 Routen

Malaysische Esskultur — Nasi Lemak, Hawker-Zentren & KLs kulinarischer Schmelztiegel
Malaysian cuisine is one of the most diverse and complex national cuisines in the world — a direct reflection of Malaysia's extraordinary multicultural composition (Malay, Chinese, Indian, and indigenous communities each contributing distinct culinary traditions that have also combined into uniquely Malaysian fusion dishes over centuries of coexistence); the hawker centre (or coffee shop, kopitiam) is the primary institution of Malaysian food culture — an open-air or semi-enclosed space with multiple food stalls each specializing in one or two dishes.

Sunway Lagoon, Genting Highlands & KLs Unterhaltungsausflüge
The entertainment resorts accessible from Kuala Lumpur — Sunway Lagoon (one of Southeast Asia's largest theme parks, in the Sunway City integrated development 20 kilometres from KL) and Genting Highlands (the mountain resort 51 kilometres northeast of KL, at 1,800 metres altitude, home to the Resorts World Genting casino resort — the only legal casino in Malaysia) — represent the entertainment economy of the Malaysian capital's hinterland.

Chinatown, Petaling Street, Merdeka Square & das alte Kuala Lumpur
Die ältesten Teile von Kuala Lumpur — das Chinatown rund um die Petaling Street, der Merdeka Square (wo 1957 die malaysische Unabhängigkeit ausgerufen wurde) und die Kulturerbe-Viertel von Masjid India — bewahren die vielschichtige multikulturelle Geschichte der malaiischen Hauptstadt.

Putrajaya — Malaysias geplante Bundeshauptstadt und Putra-Moschee
Putrajaya (25 kilometres south of Kuala Lumpur city centre — the planned administrative capital of Malaysia, developed from scratch from 1995 onwards on former palm oil plantation land in the Corridor Raya Multimedia (MSC Malaysia) as part of Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad's Vision 2020 programme of transforming Malaysia into a fully developed nation): Putrajaya is one of the largest planned city developments in Southeast Asian history, eventually encompassing 4,931 hectares of government offices, official residences, a large artificial lake, botanical gardens, and monumental civic architecture.

Batu Caves, Thaipusam-Festival & Hinduistische Tamil-Kultur in Malaysia
Batu Caves — der Kalksteinhügel 13 Kilometer nördlich von Kuala Lumpur mit einem der bedeutendsten hinduistischen Schreine außerhalb Indiens, erreichbar über 272 bunt bemalte Stufen — ist die meistbesuchte Touristenattraktion außerhalb von KL und der Schauplatz des spektakulären Thaipusam-Festivals.

Petronas Twin Towers, KLCC & Bukit Bintang — KLs Goldenes Dreieck
Die Petronas Twin Towers — das definitive Symbol des modernen Malaysia, die höchsten Gebäude der Welt von 1998 bis 2004 und nach wie vor die höchsten Zwillingstürme der Welt — verankern die KLCC-Entwicklung, die den Kern von Kuala Lumpurs Goldenem Dreieck bildet.

Bangsar, Mont Kiara & das moderne KL — Die Expatriate- und Millennial-Stadt
The modern residential and lifestyle districts of Bangsar and Mont Kiara — approximately 5-10 kilometres southwest of the city centre, developed from the 1990s onwards as the primary addresses for Kuala Lumpur's professional class, expatriate community, and young urban Malaysians — represent the face of contemporary affluent Malaysia: tree-lined streets of mid-rise condominiums and linked malls, rooftop bars, artisanal coffee shops, fitness studios, and international restaurants.

Islamisches Kunstmuseum, Nationalmuseum & Kultureinrichtungen von KL
Kuala Lumpur's major cultural institutions — the Islamic Arts Museum Malaysia (the finest Islamic art museum in Southeast Asia, with the largest collection of Islamic art and artefacts in the region), the National Museum of Malaysia (documenting the full history of Malaysia from prehistoric times to independence), and the Perdana Botanical Gardens (the former Lake Gardens, a 91.6-hectare botanical garden containing the National Planetarium, National Monument, and Deer Park) — constitute the cultural centre of Malaysia's capital.

FRIM — Regenwald-Kronendach-Walk & das Tropenwald-Forschungsinstitut
The Forest Research Institute Malaysia (FRIM, Kepong, Selangor — approximately 16 kilometres northwest of Kuala Lumpur city centre) is a 544-hectare research forest containing one of the most accessible secondary rainforest experiences near a major Southeast Asian city, including the famous canopy walkway (a suspension bridge system through the forest canopy at 30 metres height) and extensive nature trails through lowland dipterocarp forest.