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Kuala Lumpur Guandi Temple

19th-century Confucian temples19th-century architecture in MalaysiaChinese-Malaysian culture in Kuala LumpurGuandi templesHistoric buildings and structures
Malaysian religious building and structure stubsReligious buildings and structures completed in 1887Religious buildings and structures in Kuala LumpurTaoist temples in Malaysia
Guan Di Temple KL (2022 05)
Guan Di Temple KL (2022 05)

Kuala Lumpur Guandi Temple (shortened as KL Guandi Temple, Chinese: 吉隆坡关帝庙), or Kuala Lumpur Emperor Guan Temple, also known as the Kuala Lumpur Kuan Ti Temple, is a Malaysia-based Taoist temple located in the Jalan Tun H S Lee, Kuala Lumpur. Founded in 1887 or 1888, it is one of the oldest temples in Malaysia. Not available for sitting in meditation.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Kuala Lumpur Guandi Temple (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Kuala Lumpur Guandi Temple
Jalan Tun H.S. Lee,

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Wikipedia: Kuala Lumpur Guandi TempleContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 3.1439944444444 ° E 101.69692777778 °
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Address

Temple Guan Di (Kuan Ti Temple;Guan Yu Temple)

Jalan Tun H.S. Lee 168
50000 , Bukit Bintang
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
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Guan Di Temple KL (2022 05)
Guan Di Temple KL (2022 05)
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Nearby Places

Sultan Street railway station

Sultan Street railway station was a railway station located at the intersection of Jalan Sultan, Jalan Pudu and Jalan Tun Tan Cheng Lock, in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.The station was opened in 1892 and was initially a through station on the line from (the later location of) Kuala Lumpur railway station to Ampang. The track from Kuala Lumpur ran through the middle of Foch Avenue (currently Jalan Tun Tan Cheng Lock), but this section was closed after some time. Now a terminus, Sultan Street station remained accessible from the main line via a junction at what is now Salak Selatan Komuter station. A new station building was constructed for the terminus station. The station's closure date is unknown, but it is still shown on the 1962 official Malayan topographical survey map. Moreover, the station was noted as having a diesel railcar service to Seremban railway station, which was affected by a railway strike in December 1962. Multiple services per day to Ampang were still running in 1965, when another strike disrupted them. On 6 June 1967, the station was the scene of protests which were dispersed by police. In 1969, the station was still open, as it was reported train tickets could be bought here for KTM services.The railway alignments to Salak Selatan and Ampang have been re-used in the late 1990s for the Ampang and Sri Petaling lines. The current nearest station to Sultan Street station's location is Plaza Rakyat LRT station. The station was located next to the still standing Wesley Methodist Church.