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With only 2 days in KL and if a first time visitor, I would not take a day trip to Malacca which is quite far from KL ( you will spend many hours driving/in a car)
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Can anyone advise on transport from the airport, arriving on Emirates from DXB (Dubai)? What are the options for a solo traveller heading to Bukit Bintang (Jalan Alor)?
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Originally Posted by ft101
(Post 32132029)
Can anyone advise on transport from the airport, arriving on Emirates from DXB (Dubai)? What are the options for a solo traveller heading to Bukit Bintang (Jalan Alor)?
Taxi/Limo/Grab Train + taxi or train+LRT/MRT/monorail Bus + LRT/MRT/monorail or taxi For a solo traveller a taxi all the way will be a little more expensive than the train+ option, but less clunky. The bus+ is far cheaper, perfectly comfortable and takes about 20 minutes longer than the train (both go to Sentral station). If you are 2 or more, the train at MYR55 each becomes the most expensive option. 3 or more and its MYR40 each. there's a train + Grab version. It's complicated. Sentral to BB is relatively easy on public transport .... once you've done it a couple of times! MRT and Monorail go there directy: but the stations are a bit of a trial to get to. LRT is much easier to find but needs a change to MRT at Pasar Seni. If it'syour first visit a taxi would be the easiest way to go. |
Thanks.
Reading up about the MRT I see it requires tokens or a Tap and go card. Are there any other options and what are the logistics of using these methods? What is he best option given I'll probably make 3 or 4 trips during my planned time there. Anything else to watch out for? |
Originally Posted by ft101
(Post 32139942)
Thanks.
Reading up about the MRT I see it requires tokens or a Tap and go card. Are there any other options and what are the logistics of using these methods? What is he best option given I'll probably make 3 or 4 trips during my planned time there. Anything else to watch out for? The other option is cash option where you pay your journey as you go. In lieu of a ticket, you get a reusable chip coin from the ticket vending machine. It's just like any other tickets but instead of a paper/plastic ticket, it's a coin. If you are only using public transportation 3-4 times, I wouldn't bother with the Touch N Go card - it requires a RM10 deposit (IIRC). You can also just change once at KL Sentral if you take the train (KLIA Express) + MRT option. However, the MRT and KLIA Express involves a lengthy walk from KL Sentral KLIA Express station to Muzium Negara MRT Station (~500m but it's all covered and you don't have to go outside). Take KLIA Express to KL Sentral. Exit through the paid barrier gates, look for signs for MRT SBK (Sungai Buloh-Kajang) Line. Board the MRT towards Kajang direction and Bukit Bintang (where Jalan Alor is) is 3 stops away. |
Originally Posted by nov11
(Post 32140943)
You can also just change once at KL Sentral if you take the train (KLIA Express) + MRT option. However, the MRT and KLIA Express involves a lengthy walk from KL Sentral KLIA Express station to Muzium Negara MRT Station (~500m but it's all covered and you don't have to go outside).
Take KLIA Express to KL Sentral. Exit through the paid barrier gates, look for signs for MRT SBK (Sungai Buloh-Kajang) Line. Board the MRT towards Kajang direction and Bukit Bintang (where Jalan Alor is) is 3 stops away. |
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Originally Posted by ft101
(Post 32143844)
Is connecting to the monorail a better option than the SBK Line? It looks better (less walking) on the diagram I saw, but these things can be misleading. And I recall another line running from the airport beside the KLIA Express Line. Having experienced the Heathrow Express I never trust something with Express in the name, so is it a trade off between speed and price if compared with the regular line or is there more to it?
Oh you are right, I forgot about the monorail (most people do - as not many people take the monorail). I am sorry. Yes that'd be a slightly shorter walk from KL Sentral MRT station to the KL Sentral monorail station but you'd have to go through a mall (NuSentral) to get from KLIA Express exit to the monorail station (involves a few up and down escalator rides). The Bukit Bintang is an interchange station (for MRT and monorail), so both works except that the monorail gives you a scenic tour of the city, on a much slower speed compared to the 3 underground stops on MRT. If you have luggage, I'd recommend taking Grab from KL Sentral to Jalan Alor. Probably cost around RM10 (<$2.50 USD) if isn't raining or during peak hours. The MRT/monorail ride should cost less than RM2 (<$0.50 USD). Btw, you get a 10% discount if you buy your KLIA Express tickets from the ticket vending machine instead of an attendant. |
Originally Posted by nov11
(Post 32143950)
Btw, you get a 10% discount if you buy your KLIA Express tickets from the ticket vending machine instead of an attendant. Else the alternative route will be take KLIA transit to Bandar Tasik Selatan, then Grab to Jalan Alor |
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Yikes!
I'm surprised nobody's yet thrown the Putra Heights shuttle into the mix. Points: taxi all the way IS expensive, might clash with traffic, but it has the blessing of being really easy! for a singe traveller train is around half the taxi price, but with the faff of changing transport modes it's clunky and could take as long as the taxi bus is a third of the train fare, goes to the same place (Sentral) but entails a slightly clunkier transfer the the train (you have to go up a level) If you end up in Sentral (train or bus)
And there IS a Putra Heights Kelana Jaya LRT shuttle which i think is the grand-daddy of budget routes. But best forgotten. |
Originally Posted by thelostshark
(Post 31944872)
Thanks very much. BB definitely sounds like a possibility.
Kuala Lumpur just made the NY Times' list of 52 places to go this year, and they're recommending the Chow Kit district. A snippet from the article at the link below "This year, however, visitors might focus on the neighborhood of Chow Kit, as the recent opening of two hotels delivers a fresh dose of style and energy to the gritty, underappreciated red-light district. ... the district is home to the country’s largest fresh-produce market, Southeast Asia’s biggest Sikh temple and eclectic new restaurants like the Caribbean-influenced Joloko. Along Jalan Doraisamy, a one-way street that runs off the district’s main artery and was once a popular nightclub strip, reimagined shophouses have become The Row, an enclave of hip stores, art spaces and places to eat and drink." KL is #20 on the list. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/...-to-visit.html I recommend going to the Petronas Twin Towers, some of the most beautiful skyscrapers I've ever seen and also the Batu Caves. Take a food tour too, it was great to get out of the City Center and out into the suburbs with a guide that actually knew what he was doing. |
Originally Posted by siege101
(Post 32581959)
I know you've already gone but for anybody looking for the future, Hotel Stripes in Chow Kit is a beautiful hotel and was very well priced. I walked to Bukit Bintang & KLCC everyday I was there and yes it's hot but it's SEA, what do you expect? There was also an MRT station within about a 5-10 minute walk.
The LRT is only 3 stops from Sentral, where the train and bus arrive from the airport - but while the LRT station is a short distance from the hotel, it might be a complicated first-time walk. Monorail also goes from Sentral but it's messy to find, and takes forever. |
Originally Posted by IAN-UK
(Post 32582699)
Monorail (Medan Tuanku) and LRT (Dang Wangi) are close, but the MRT could be a bit of hike.
The LRT is only 3 stops from Sentral, where the train and bus arrive from the airport - but while the LRT station is a short distance from the hotel, it might be a complicated first-time walk. Monorail also goes from Sentral but it's messy to find, and takes forever. |
Did you end up going?
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KL back under lockdown
The Klang Valley, which includes Kuala Lumpur, Selangor and Putrajaya are again under a movement control order.
Sabah, too: indeed election-generated movement to, from and within the East Malaysia state are being blamed for an upsurge in infections focused around the capital region in Peninsula Malaysia. |
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