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Damansara Heights (Malay: Bukit Damansara) is an upscale suburb in western side of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, located five kilometres away from the city centre. The suburb falls under the Segambut district and its parliamentary constituency .
The fourth major change was to build the RM6.5 million Damansara bypass to ease traffic congestion and the relocation of the temporary oxidation pond built in 1983 in front of the Modern Dry Market. Residents and the users of Jalan Damansara in the 1980s were familiar with this very odorous landmark.
Old Town is directly north of the New Pantai Expressway, a major highway connecting Subang Jaya with the federal capital of Kuala Lumpur.It borders the PJS51 industrial area to the west, the Section 6 and 7 neighbourhoods to the north, the Section 1A and 5 inner suburbs to the east, and Taman Medan and Taman Petaling Utama inner suburbs to the south.
A section of the Damansara Town Centre building as seen from Sprint Expressway. Pusat Bandar Damansara (English: Damansara Town Centre) is a township in the Segambut constituency of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The original buildings making up the township were constructed between 1981 and 1984, and were demolished in 2016 for new development.
Some of the original forests remain in the Bukit Cherakah Forest Reserve (including the National Botanic Gardens), Kota Damansara Community Forest Park and Bukit Gasing. During the 1991 census, it recorded 633,165 people. [citation needed] The official 2010 census recorded the population of Petaling as 1,660,869 people, excluding foreigners. [4]
The Saidina Umar Al Khattab Mosque (MSUAK) (Malay: Masjid Saidina Umar Al Khattab) is a prominent mosque in Bukit Damansara (Damansara Heights), Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. [1] The mosque was officially opened on 22 March 1984 by the seventh Yang di-Pertuan Agong, Sultan Ahmad Shah of Pahang and was named after Muhammad's successor Umar Al Khattab.
Damansara was originally a small harbour-like settlement that was located near the mouth of the Damansara River along the Klang River.In the mid-1870s, it was the final destination for steamboats used by the British to travel to Kuala Lumpur from Klang as the steam boats used cannot go as far as the center of Kuala Lumpur near the junction of Gombak River and Klang River.
Damansara Road Jalan Damansara: 白沙罗路 Named after the suburb of Bukit Damansara. The road leads to Damansara Heights connecting with Jalan Jelutong and is also a highway as well. Campbell Road Jalan Dang Wangi: 金马律 Formerly named after Douglas Campbell (1867–1918), resident of Negri Sembilan, Johor's first British advisor.