Monday, June 6, 2011

Located at Petaling Street



welcome to,
Stay Green Inn , near Pasar Seni, Petaling Street, restaurant and business center.

Petaling Street is the center of Kuala Lumpur's original Chinatown. It's the place that never sleeps. Adventurous visitors should not miss a walk on Petaling Street.
Even in daytime you have great bargains. Petaling Street is not open for the traffic. It is a great place for locals to get some goods at bargain prices and certainly an eye-opening experience for tourists.
Chinatown has  a bustling market serving as a bargain hunter's paradise and one of the premier shopping areas in the city with its distinctly oriental atmosphere.
 
If you're looking for cheap clothes, fabrics, souvenirs, electronic items, watches, DVDs, CDs and more? Then Petaling Street is the place for you. It is easy getting to Petaling Street. Take a taxi, but also numerous bus companies service the area.
To get the best atmosphere you must go at night!


Pendingin hawa, internet wayarles . Bilik mandi berkongsi antara kemudahan yang sudah ada dalam setiap bilik. Dengan WiFi , hotel Kuala Lumpur ini pasti menjadikan perjalanan setiap tetamu menyeronokkan. Hotel ini menggabungkan perkhidmatan pakar dengan kemudahan terkini untuk memberikan para tetamu pengalaman yang tidak akan dilupakan. 

reseptionist

Lobby

Internet corner

Toilet



Room corridor
Table writting



RATE PRICE
1 single bedroom RM 50.00/ USD 17.00



2 single bedroom RM60.00 /USD20.00       Double bedroom RM65.00 /USD22.00



3 single bedroom RM70.00 / USD 24.00     4 single bedroom RM80.00/ USD 27.00

Dometry one bedroom RM 30.00 /  USD 10.00

FLYERS
  JALAN PETALING @ CHINATOWN KUALA LUMPUR 
 Petaling Street (Malay: Jalan Petaling, Simplified Chinese: 茨厂街, Traditional Chinese: 茨廠街, pinyin: Cíchǎng Jiē, Cantonese: Chee Cheong Kai) is a Chinatown located in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. It is infamous for pirated clothes and accessories along with bootleg DVDs and CDs. Petaling Street however does not exclusively offer pirated products. Haggling is a common sight here and the place is usually crowded with locals as well as tourists.
The area has dozens of restaurants and food stalls, serving local favourites such as Hokkien mee, ikan bakar (barbecued fish), asam laksa andcurry noodles. Traders here are mainly Chinese but there are also Indian, Malay, and Bangladeshi traders.
History and development
The original Chinatown centred on Market Square. Jalan Tun H.S. Lee or High Street, became increasingly popular as it was higher than the rest of the town and therefore less prone to floods. The wealthier and more ornate shop houses were built north of Jalan Cheng Lock, closer to the business centre.
Kuala Lumpur was a typical "pioneer" town at the turn of the century, filled with a rough and tough population that was largely male.
They were largely Cantonese and Hakkas who came to the city because of the tin trade, working as coolies in the mines. They were governed by a Chinese Kapitan or headmen. The most famous Chinese Kapitan is Yap Ah Loy, a Hakka.
In 1870, civil war erupted with the Chinese community being split along partisan lines into the Cantonese Ghee Hin and the Hakka Hai San secret societies. The British were called in to help end the strife but many of the buildings in the settlement were burnt down or severely damaged.
During the Selangor Civil War, the tin mines were abandoned and when the miners returned after the war, they found that the mines were flooded and therefore could not work. Yap Ah Loy persuaded the miners and coolies to remain in KL and the Malays in surrounding districts to grow rice and other garden products. He opened a Tapioca Mill in Petaling Street where the tubers from his farms were brought here to be ground into flour. Petaling Street is still fondly called ‘Chee Cheong Kai’ in Cantonese which means starch factory street.