Central George Town
Bandar George Town
From top, left to right:
City centre is located in Central George Town, Penang
City centre
City centre
Central George Town is bounded in black within    George Town
Coordinates: 5°24′47.019″N 100°19′50.7426″E / 5.41306083°N 100.330761833°E / 5.41306083; 100.330761833
Country Malaysia
State Penang
City George Town
Incorporated (city)1 January 1957
Government
  TypeCity council
  BodyPenang Island City Council
  MayorRajendran P. Anthony
  City SecretaryCheong Chee Hong
Area
  Total19 km2 (7 sq mi)
Population
 (2020)[1]
  Total158,336
  Density8,300/km2 (22,000/sq mi)
Postal code
100xx
Area code(s)+6042
Part ofMelaka and George Town, the Historic Cities of the Straits of Malacca
CriteriaCultural: ii, iii, iv
Reference1223-002
Inscription2008 (32nd Session)
Area109.38 ha
Buffer zone150.04 ha

Central George Town is the city centre of George Town, the capital of the Malaysian state of Penang. It corresponds to the eponymous mukim of George Town, which is mostly identical to the original city limits established when George Town was granted city status in 1957.[2][3]

Encompassing 19 km2 (7.3 sq mi) of the northeastern promontory of Penang Island, the city centre stretches from Gurney Drive in the northwest to The Light Waterfront development in the southeast, encompassing the Central Business District and the 260 ha (2.6 km2) UNESCO World Heritage Site.[4] It is also home to the seats of the executive and legislative branches of the Penang state government.

History

George Town's modern history dates back to 17 July 1786 when Francis Light first set foot at what is now Fort Cornwallis within the downtown area. Over time, the city expanded from the tip of the northeastern cape of Penang Island, eventually reaching its original city limits when it was granted city status in 1957. However, Jelutong was later carved out of the southernmost corner of the city centre as a separate mukim in 1966.[2]

Prior to the independence of Malaya in 1957, George Town had been conferred city status by Queen Elizabeth II, making it the first city within the new nation. In the post-independence years, George Town remained the largest and only city in Malaya. This continued until 1963 when Singapore was incorporated into the Malaysian federation, displacing George Town as the largest city of the country. However, Singapore's expulsion from Malaysia almost two years later left George Town once again as the sole city in Malaysia until 1974 when Kuala Lumpur was granted city status.

The merger of the George Town City Council with the Penang Island Rural District Council in 1974 sparked a debate over George Town's city status that lasted for decades. While George Town was once again conferred city status in 2015, the city's jurisdiction was expanded to cover the entirety of Penang Island and surrounding islets, far beyond George Town's original city limits.[5] Today, the mukim of George Town is considered the economic and political heart of the city.

Komtar houses the Office of the Chief Minister of Penang, as well as agencies of the Penang state government and the Penang Island City Council.

Geography

The city centre of George Town encompasses 19 km2 (7.3 sq mi) of the northeastern plains of Penang Island, forming the basin of the Pinang River, the main river system on the island. Aside from the 260 ha (2.6 km2) UNESCO World Heritage Site which marks the city's old core, the area also includes newer neighborhoods like Karpal Singh Drive and The Light Waterfront. The city centre shares boundaries with Tanjong Tokong to the northwest, Air Itam to the west, and Jelutong and Gelugor to the south.

The city's Central Business District (CBD), an economic corridor that contains much of George Town's financial and services sectors, lies entirely within the city centre.[6] The UNESCO World Heritage Zone that covers the northeastern tip of Penang Island is entirely encompassed by the CBD.

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1911101,182    
1921123,069+21.6%
1931149,408+21.4%
1947189,068+26.5%
1957234,903+24.2%
1970269,247+14.6%
1980250,578−6.9%
1991219,603−12.4%
2000180,573−17.8%
2010198,298+9.8%
2020158,336−20.2%
Source: [7]

As of 2020, the city centre was home to 158,336 residents, or nearly +15 of George Town's total population.[8][9] In spite of being the commercial and political heart of Penang however, the city centre has witnessed a decline in population since the late 20th century, owing to the rapid industrialisation and economic growth of the suburbs, coupled with the repeal of the Rent Control Act in 2001.[10][11][12][13] Nonetheless, the city centre remains relatively popular among expatriates within George Town, comprising over 5.3% of the city centre's population in 2010.[14]

In recent years, the state's authorities, under the governance of Pakatan Harapan, have begun undertaking various measures to rejuvenate and rehabilitate the area. This includes exploring the economic synergies between the city centre and Butterworth on the mainland under the 'Penang Bay' concept.[15][16][7]

Economy

Finance

Beach Street is now home to several major banks, including Bank of China, OCBC and HSBC.

Since its inception, the city centre of George Town has functioned as the financial hub of Penang. In the late 19th century, George Town emerged as the primary financial centre of British Malaya, attracting major international banks such as Standard Chartered, HSBC, and the Royal Bank of Scotland.[17][18] Most of these banks formed a financial cluster in the vicinity of Beach Street.[17][19][20]

Today, much of George Town's financial services remain concentrated within the Central Business District (CBD). The CBD is home to international banks, federal financial institutions like Bank Negara and the Employees Provident Fund, and ancillary services such as auditing, market intelligence and legal firms.[21][22][23] The Penang Island City Council's Local Plan 2030 proposed the CBD as one of the city's four economic corridors, along with the Bayan BaruBayan Lepas, Tanjong TokongTanjong Bungah and Batu FerringhiTeluk Bahang corridors.[24] Encompassing areas such as the city's UNESCO World Heritage Site, Pulau Tikus, Kampung Siam, Kampong Serani and Ayer Rajah, the CBD was envisioned as the centre for financial and service sectors, with the aim of enhancing George Town's position as a global city.

Retail

TGV Cinemas is one of the main anchor tenants of 1st Avenue Mall, pictured here.

The city centre boasts a flourishing retail industry that combines modern shopping malls with traditional shophouses. The Central Business District (CBD) houses several of the city's most popular malls, including Gurney Plaza, Gurney Paragon, 1st Avenue, Prangin Mall, Komtar, GAMA and Penang Times Square. In 2022, Gurney Plaza and Komtar were among the top five destinations in Penang among domestic tourists.[25] In addition, markets and traditional shops, such as Chowrasta Market and Little India, offer a wide array of local products like spices, nutmegs and Tambun biscuits, a delicacy unique to the state.[20][26][27]

Services

Due to the UNESCO World Heritage Site's increasing popularity as a tourist destination, there has been a significant increase in the number of accommodation, food and beverages (F&B), and other hospitality-related businesses within the area. According to a Think City report in 2021, a decade after the UNESCO listing, hotels occupied almost 18% of the heritage zone's land use, which is the highest among all business categories. This shift was attributable to the surge in tourist arrivals, which also caused a significant economic shift from financial to hospitality services.[20]

Education

The RCSI & UCD Malaysia Campus is an international campus of two Irish universities Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland and University College Dublin.

The city centre hosts several prominent secondary schools that were established during British rule. Founded in 1816, Penang Free School is the oldest English school in Southeast Asia. British colonial rule had also encouraged the growth of mission schools such as St. Xavier's Institution, St. George's Girls' School and Methodist Boys' School, all of which are located within the city centre.[28] In addition, the city centre is home to three international and expatriate schools Penang Japanese School, St. Christopher's International Primary School and Wesley Methodist School Penang.[29]

The area is also a tertiary education hub, housing a significant number of private colleges and universities such as Wawasan Open University, Han Chiang University College of Communication, DISTED College and RCSI & UCD Malaysia Campus.[30][31] In 2016, the Penang state government inaugurated the Penang Digital Library, a first-of-its-kind facility in Malaysia situated within the Penang Free School compound.[32] The library provides structured access to more than 3,000 specially-curated ebooks.[33]

Health care

Penang General Hospital is the main public hospital in George Town.

The 1,100-bedded Penang General Hospital within the city centre serves as the main tertiary referral hospital within northwestern Malaysia.[34] Aside from the public hospital, the city centre is a popular destination for medical tourism, boasting some of Penang's leading private hospitals such as Penang Adventist Hospital, Gleneagles Hospital, Island Hospital and Loh Guan Lye Specialists Centre.[35] The private hospitals in Penang have contributed significantly to the growth of medical tourism in the state, generating a revenue of more than RM356 million in 2022 from medical tourist arrivals.[36]

Sports

The City Stadium is the home ground of Penang FC, the professional football club that represents Penang in interstate tournaments.[37][38] The city centre is also home to the oldest equestrian centre in Malaysia the Penang Turf Club, which was established in 1864.[39] It is among the few venues in the country that hosts thoroughbred racing events, with the others being the Perak Turf Club and Selangor Turf Club.[40]

Transportation

Penang Road, Dato Keramat Road, Gurney Drive, Northam Road and Green Lane are some of the centuries-old municipal roads that still serve as major thoroughfares within the city centre. The George Town Inner Ring Road, which comprises Gurney Drive, Jalan Pangkor, Jalan Perak and Jalan Sungai Pinang, forms a loop within the city centre.

Additionally, the city centre is home to Swettenham Pier, the busiest port-of-call for cruise shipping in Malaysia, and the Raja Tun Uda Ferry Terminal, which provides a ferry service linking the city centre with mainland Seberang Perai.[41] Most of Rapid Penang's city-wide routes also originate from the Komtar bus terminal, which acts as the central public bus terminal for the city.[42][43] In a bid to reduce reliance on private vehicles and traffic congestion, the Penang state government introduced LinkBike, a public bicycle-sharing system, within the city centre in 2017.[44]

Infrastructure

Karpal Singh Drive is a waterfront promenade that was created by IJM Corporation through land reclamation.

Land reclamation has a long history within the city centre, dating back to the 19th century when British administrators reclaimed a section of the present-day coastline Beach Street.[45] However, it wasn't until the end of the 20th century that extensive land reclamation was carried out to provide more valuable land for development, such as at Karpal Singh Drive and The Light Waterfront.[45][46] Additionally, a stretch of the Gurney Drive shoreline has been transformed into Gurney Bay, planned as a seafront public recreational space.

To address the worsening traffic congestion in Penang, the state government has planned to introduce urban rail throughout the state, which includes the proposed 29 km (18 mi) Bayan Lepas LRT that stretches through the city centre.[47] This light rail line is envisioned to have an interchange station at Komtar, linking the city centre with Tanjong Tokong and Tanjong Bungah to the north, and with Bayan Baru and the Penang International Airport to the south.[48][49]

See also

References

  1. "Population and Housing Statistics". Key Findings Population and Housing Census of Malaysia 2020: Pulau Pinang (in Malay and English). Putrajaya: Department of Statistics (Malaysia). 29 May 2022. p. 96. ISBN 9789672535164.
  2. 1 2 "Kod dan Nama Sempadan Pentadbiran Tanah Unique Parcel Identifier (UPI) Pulau Pinang" (PDF). Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment. 2011.
  3. Penang past and present, 1786-1963: a historical account of the City of George Town since 1786. George Town: George Town City Council. 1966.
  4. "Melaka and George Town, Historic Cities of the Straits of Malacca". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. UNESCO. Retrieved 26 May 2017.
  5. "George Town meliputi 'pulau', jelas Datuk Bandar" (PDF). Buletin Mutiara. 1 May 2015.
  6. "Draf Rancangan Tempatan Pulau Pinang (Pulau) 2030 Jilid 1". Penang Island City Council.
  7. 1 2 Usman Yaakob; Tarmiji Masron; Fujimaki Masami. "Ninety Years of Urbanization in Malaysia: A Geographical Investigation of Its Trends and Characteristics" (PDF). Ritsumeikan University.
  8. "Population and Housing Statistics". Key Findings Population and Housing Census of Malaysia 2020: Pulau Pinang (in Malay and English). Putrajaya: Department of Statistics (Malaysia). 29 May 2022. p. 96. ISBN 9789672535164.
  9. "Map ~ Stats GeoPortal". statsgeo.mycensus.gov.my. Retrieved 15 October 2023.
  10. Evelyn Teh (July 2016). "Where the Sea Meets the City is Where the World Meets Penang". Penang Monthly. Archived from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 30 November 2017.
  11. "Higher Education in Regional and City Development : State of Penang, Malaysia". OECD.
  12. Nancy Duxbury, W.F. Garrett-Petts, David MacLennan (2015). Cultural Mapping as Cultural Inquiry. Routledge. ISBN 9781317588016.
  13. Daniel Goh, P. S. (2014). "Between History and Heritage: Post-Colonialism, Globalisation, and the Remaking of Malacca, Penang and Singapore" (PDF). Trans-Regional and -National Studies of Southeast Asia. 2.
  14. "Population Distribution by Local Authority Areas and Mukims, 2010 (page 1 & 8)" (PDF). Department of Statistics, Malaysia. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 February 2015. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
  15. "GEORGE TOWN WORLD HERITAGE SITE: A CITY IN TRANSITION Population and Land Use Census 2009—2019" (PDF). Think City. 2021.
  16. "PENANG BAY INTERNATIONAL IDEAS COMPETITION: REIMAGINING THE WATERFRONTS OF GEORGE TOWN AND BUTTERWORTH, PENANG, MALAYSIA". Penang state government. 2020.
  17. 1 2 Langdon, Marcus (2014). George Town's Historic Commercial and Civic Precincts. Penang: George Town World Heritage Incorporated.
  18. Wong, Yee Tuan (2015). Penang Chinese Commerce in the 19th Century: The Rise and Fall of the Big Five. Singapore: ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute. ISBN 978-981-4515-02-3.
  19. Khoo, Su Nin (2007). Streets of George Town, Penang. Penang: Areca Books. ISBN 978-983-9886-00-9.
  20. 1 2 3 "GEORGE TOWN WORLD HERITAGE SITE: A CITY IN TRANSITION Population and Land Use Census 2009—2019" (PDF). Think City. September 2021.
  21. "List of Company Secretaries, Taxation and Accounting Services" (PDF). Invest Penang. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 November 2017. Retrieved 27 May 2017.
  22. "Our Offices and SST". Employees Provident Fund. Retrieved 7 December 2023.
  23. "BNMLINK & BNM Offices". Central Bank of Malaysia. Retrieved 7 December 2023.
  24. "Draf Rancangan Tempatan Pulau Pinang (Pulau) 2030 Jilid 1". Penang Island City Council.
  25. "Laporan Sosioekonomi Negeri Pulau Pinang 2022". Department of Statistics Malaysia. August 2023.
  26. Lim Yoke Mui; Nurwati Badarulzaman; A. Ghafar Ahmad (20–22 January 2003). "Retail Activity in Malaysia : From Shophouse to Hypermarket" (PDF). School of Housing, Building and Planning, University of Science, Malaysia. Pacific Rim Real Estate Society (PRRES). Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 January 2016. Retrieved 24 January 2016.
  27. Ng, Su-Ann (28 March 2006). "Bazaar bustling with bargain hunters". The Star.
  28. Ooi, Keat Gin (2015). "Disparate Identities: Penang from a Historical Perspective, 1780–1941" (PDF). Kajian Malaysia. 33 (Supp. 2): 27–52. ISSN 0127-4082. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
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  31. "Your destination for world-class education" (PDF). StudyPenang.
  32. Francis, Jolynn (3 June 2016). "Paperless library option". The Star.
  33. FRANCIS, JOLYNN (3 June 2016). "Paperless library option". The Star. Retrieved 17 December 2023.
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  36. MULYANTO, RANDY (21 November 2023). "Malaysia's Penang lures medical tourists from Indonesia". Nikkei, Inc. Retrieved 7 December 2023.
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  38. Ong, K. H. (9 February 2023). "Penang FC sets sight on top 10 finish in Super League". Buletin Mutiara. Retrieved 17 December 2023.
  39. Hockton, Keith (2012). Penang: An Inside Guide to Its Historic Homes, Buildings, Monuments and Parks. Petaling Jaya: MPH Group. ISBN 978-967-415-303-8.
  40. PALANSAMY, YISWAREE (18 July 2020). "Selangor, Penang turf clubs host unprecedented concurrent race meet tomorrow". Malay Mail. Retrieved 17 December 2023.
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  45. 1 2 Chee, Su Yin (13 August 2017). "Land reclamation and artificial islands: Walking the tightrope between development and conservation" (PDF). Universiti Sains Malaysia.
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