Kampung Sungai Penchala is a small Malay village in the Segambut constituency in northwestern Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, with the postcode 60000 KUALA LUMPUR, lying along the Federal Territory– Selangor border. This village is next to Taman Tun Dr Ismail in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia which also shares the same 60000 KUALA LUMPUR postcode, [1] and adjacent to Mutiara Damansara and Bandar Utama that were once part of a large oil palm plantation across the interstate border.
Despite the fact that the Government has gazetted Kampung Sungai Penchala as one of the Malay Reserve lands in Kuala Lumpur, this village is being actively developed and is arguably the most rapidly developed areas in the past 10 years with many developments having taken place. [ citation needed]
In 1998, the
Damansara–Puchong Expressway (LDP)
Damansara–Puchong Expressway was opened on the village's western border, connecting Kampung Sungai Penchala to
Bandar Sri Damansara,
Sungai Buloh,
Kepong and
Gombak through the
MRR2 to the north and to
Damansara Utama,
Damansara Jaya, SS2 and
Kelana Jaya to the south.
In 2004, the
SPRINT Highway
Sprint Expressway was opened, intersecting with the aforementioned LDP just outside this village. Kampung Sungai Penchala is hence connected to downtown Kuala Lumpur and
Mont Kiara/
Sri Hartamas via the Penchala Tunnel. It is also 3 minutes' drive to the
Duta–Ulu Klang Expressway (DUKE)
Duta–Ulu Klang Expressway which serves as a shortcut to Gombak,
Ampang and
Ulu Kelang.
Five minutes' away is the
New Klang Valley Expressway (NKVE)
North–South Expressway Northern Route, part of the
PLUS system, with connections to
Ipoh to the north and
Shah Alam, Bukit Raja and
Klang to the west.
In terms of public transportation, the village is accessible from KG09 MRT Mutiara Damansara.
Kampung Sungai Penchala has two mosques; Masjid Al-Hidayah, as well as Masjid Jamek Tengku Abdul Aziz Shah. Kampung Sungai Penchala has an ethnic Malay population made up of various hailing from a number of regions from Indonesia, such as Kerinchi, Boyan or Bawean, Java, and Minangkabau who have long lived in the village. Kampung Sungai Penchala is further broken down into a number of smaller villages, namely:
There is a weekly night market (pasar malam) every Wednesday evening at the car park near the Masjid Jamek Tengku Abdul Aziz Shah.