China Town: What a Novel Concept ?
If they need more criteria for classifying big cities in the 21st century they may as well use China Towns as one. It seems regardless of which corner of which hemisphere you find yourself on you will encounter a China Town. Being from San Francisco, China Town is something which all too familiar.
Every website and Lonely Planet guide had Kuala Lumpur’s China Town as one of the “must go” places in Kuala Lumpur. Most travelers who find their way in Kuala Lumpur will have likely seen their fair share of Chinatowns in the past. Whether you agree with KL Chinatown’s “must go” status depends on your style and goals of your trip.
Getting to China Town in Kuala Lumpur
China Town is not too far from the Petronas Towers. Ask a taxi driver and they will say it is far but in decent weekday traffic (I wasn’t there on the weekend so I don’t know if it’s worse) it took less than 10 minutes to get to Petronas Towers to China Town. If the taxi driver has trouble understanding just say, “Petaling Street.” Petaling street is the the main Chinatown street which would me more aply named Peddling Street.
Cheap Chinese Food, Knock Offs, Beer & Cheap Hotels
Chinatown was the main area in KL for backpackers and bargain hunters (wait, aren’t they the same?). Chinese food is world renowned for being cheap and Petaling Street is no exception. You can find a number of Chinese food restaurants with inside and outside dining if you turn off the main street. I actually didn’t feel like eating Chinese food at the time and I stepped outside Chinatown and found some of the best hamburgers I’ve ever had.
The main street is essentually jam packed with venders selling all kinds of junk, from life-sized gun cigarette lighters, to samurai swords to of course designer knock-off merchandise. It is one of the few places in KL where it felt like Bangkok as the venders were somewhat pushy. The stuff there I would say was mostly junk which was really no different from anything you can find in Bangkok or I’m sure most other SE Asian cities. Most of the guides stated the KL Chinatown had some of the best prices on these “goods” but I didn’t even bother asking because I’m on an anti-junk phase at the moment.
All the Kuala Lumpur travel guides listed Chinatown as the primary area for cheap lodging. I saw a lot of tourists and backpackers in the area. There were hotels and guesthouses all around which I didn’t check out personally but I’d assume some of them offer temporary 6-legged roommates if you know what I mean.
All China Towns the Same ?
I haven’t been to every single Chinatown in the world but I’ve been to a few. From San Francisco, to New York to Yokohama Japan to the Disneyland of Chinatowns, Hong Kong (I guess you could call Hong Kong a Chinatown?) I can’t really see the allure of traveling far and wide for the purpose of visiting a Chinatown. For the China Town’s I’ve been to, I would consider San Francisco’s to be the best, even better than Hong Kong if you consider you can find tons of junk as well as some nice stuff in a 6 or so block radius. Some may even say that San Francisco’s Chinatown has been run by Chinese longer than Hong Kong anyways?
Overall Impression
For me, Chinatown in KL was a complete waste of time. I live in Bangkok and didn’t need to save a couple bucks to get cheap stuff I could get in Bangkok if I even wanted the stuff. I haven’t been to Bangkok’s Chinatown yet so I cannot compare the two. Fortunately, Chinatown was very close to the rest of “downtown” Kuala Lumpur so it was only a pit stop on my whirlwind tour of Malaysia’s capital.







