Eighty kilometres northwest of Tapah in the Kinta Valley, IPOH grew rich on the tin trade and is now the third biggest city in Malaysia. The muddy Sungei Kinta cuts the centre of Ipoh neatly in two; most of the hotels are situated east of the river, whilst the old town is on the opposite side between Jalan Sultan Idris Shah and Jalan Sultan Iskander. Some of Ipoh's old colonial street names have been changed in favour of something more Islamic, though the signs haven't always caught up; hence, Jalan CM Yusuf instead of Jalan Chamberlain, Jalan Mustapha Al-Bakri for Jalan Clare and Jalan Bandar Timar for Jalan … more »
Ipoh is the state capital of Perak, a city that made its fortune in the... more »
Ipoh Airport has 5 medium sized aircraft departing each week.There are... more »
Once growing extremely rich with tin trading Ipoh is currently one of... more »
This city in northwestern Malaysia was founded by Chinese tin miners and continues to be populated... more »