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Southern Integrated Gateway

Coordinates: 1°27′49″N 103°45′51″E / 1.46361°N 103.76417°E / 1.46361; 103.76417

The Southern Integrated Gateway (Malay: Gerbang Selatan Bersepadu) refers to a complex at Bukit Chagar, Johor Bahru, Johor, Malaysia incorporating the city's main railway station, JB Sentral, and a customs, immigration, and quarantine complex (CIQ), the Sultan Iskandar Building (Malay: Bangunan Sultan Iskandar), named after Almarhum Sultan Iskandar ibni Almarhum Sultan Ismail of Johor.

Southern Integrated Gateway
Malay: Gerbang Selatan Bersepadu
Tamil: தெற்கு ஒருங்கிணைந்த நுழைவாயில்
General information
TypeBorder control
LocationJohor Bahru, Johor, Malaysia
Groundbreaking14 February 2003; 20 years ago (2003-02-14)
Construction started2 December 2003; 19 years ago (2003-12-02)
Opened16 December 2008; 14 years ago (2008-12-16)

The station and complex are the main transportation hub of Johor Bahru and southern Peninsular Malaysia. The Malaysian Public Works Department was responsible for the design and construction of the project; Gerbang Perdana Sdn Bhd was the main contractor. This project is part of the Iskandar Malaysia development corridor project.

The CIQ complex was opened to vehicular traffic on 16 December 2008. As of October 2010, the JB Sentral railway station entered operation and service to the old Johor Bahru railway station ceased.

Benefits of the project

The project sought to improve the traffic flow within Johor Bahru Central Business District. The regional road network was enhanced by the linking of the CIQ complex to the North–South Expressway via the Johor Bahru Inner Ring Road. The project also improved the transportation links between Johor Bahru and Singapore.[1]

The project was intended to also attract Singaporean tourists to Johor Bahru and the rest of Johor because of the improved transportation link, which increases convenience and decreases travelling time.

History

Events

 
Construction of the road leading to highway
 
Bangunan Sultan Iskandar–Customs, Immigration and Quarantine centre under construction in 2006
Start End Event
End of 2002 The new CIQ complex is proposed.
Early 2003 The Lumba Kuda flats and other structures including Kampung Ungku Mohsin and Bukit Cagar recreational park are demolished.
14 February 2003 The Southern Integrated Gateway is officially launched by Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, then Prime Minister of Malaysia.
2 December 2003 Construction of CIQ complex begins.
10 March 2006 The pilings for the new scenic bridge are completed.
12 April 2006 The construction of the new Tanjung Puteri road bridge replacing Malaysian side of causeway was cancelled.
26 April 2006 The 250-million-Ringgit eight-lane straight elevated permanent link from Causeway to the new CIQ complex in Bukit Chagar was proposed by the Ministry of Works and Gerbang Perdana.
30 July 2006 The Johor state government announces plans to build a new Johor Bahru Maglev monorail transit system. It will connect JB Sentral to Tebrau City in the east and JB Sentral to Skudai in the west.
18 January 2007 The construction of the short-term-access temporary road begins.
1 June 2007 30 June 2007 Beam launching works for Tanjung Puteri Bridge as part of the short-term access.
1 July 2007 The new Custom, Immigration and Quarantine Complex building is occupied by the user departments.
Mid-2008 The Bukit Cagar flats are demolished.
1 December 2008 The new Custom, Immigration and Quarantine (CIQ) Complex building is officially named the "Sultan Iskandar Complex" by the Sultan of Johor. The customs complex was opened to cars and motorcycles entering Johor Bahru on the same day.[2]
16 December 2008 The Sultan Iskandar Complex is opened to all road traffic.
21 October 2010 JB Sentral opens for railway operations.
12 November 2011 New 8 lane straight road opened to all road traffic

Main components

Sultan Iskandar Building

 
Immigration checkpoint to enter Johor Bahru
See also Sultan Iskandar Building

JB Sentral transportation hub

 
Entrance to JB Sentral, lit at night.

Johor Bahru Sentral railway station or in short form JB Sentral is the transport hub for Johor Bahru, similar to KL Sentral in Kuala Lumpur. The total area of JB Sentral is 79,000 square metres (850,000 sq ft), almost two times larger than KL Sentral (42,000 m2 or 450,000 sq ft). The hub has a KTM railway station (opened on 21 October 2010) and a bus station, which occupies an area of 9,500 square metres (102,000 sq ft). The bus station is expected to handle approximately 15,000 bus passengers per hour, reducing traffic congestion at the 20-year-old Larkin Terminal Station. There are 2,000 parking spaces allocated at JB Sentral.

The trains operate in a north–south orientation. The site's western boundary is constrained by the Caltex petrol station abutting the rail track fencing; Jalan Jim Quee to the east has a platform level up to 8 metres (26 ft) higher, which slopes to the rail tracks.

The terminal is designed to operate six rail lines and four island platforms (530 m × 8 m or 1,739 ft × 26 ft) on a straight alignment. The JB Sentral building is designed to fit this narrow site by placing the passenger hall and ticketing offices directly above the rail tracks, with escalators and lifts providing access to the rail platforms below.

A pedestrian bridge connects JB Sentral to Johor Bahru City Square the Tun Abdul Razak Complex.

A new station for the Johor Bahru–Singapore Rapid Transit System that connects to the Singapore MRT at Woodlands North will be built at Bukit Chagar located north of JB Sentral by 2024.

Links to other roads

 
Bangunan Sultan Iskandar, seen from car heading towards Jalan Lingkaran Dalam

The 250-million-Ringgit, eight-lane, straight elevated permanent link on the originally planned flyover bridge is a main road from the Johor–Singapore Causeway to the new CIQ complex. The old checkpoint for light vehicles, the Tanjung Puteri Customs Complex for heavy vehicles, and the old checkpoint bridge were demolished starting in May 2009.

There is a flyover connecting this project to the Johor Bahru Inner Ring Road and a new highway, the Johor Bahru Eastern Dispersal Link, which links the Southern Integrated Gateway to the interchange of the North–South Expressway Southern Route near Pandan.

The construction of the new Permas Jaya second bridge commenced in 2008.

Critical reception

On its opening day on 16 December 2008, motorists entering Malaysia from Singapore were greeted by a plague of problems such as long queues and traffic confusion. Public transport was also badly affected; some commuters said that crossing the causeway took them almost two hours, rather than 15 minutes as it had with the old checkpoint.[3] (Although the new checkpoint boasts 76 lanes for cars, these 76 lanes split from only one lane that enters the complex. This is because there are only two lanes entering the complex. Of these, one is for cars, and one is for buses and other vehicles.) There was also reportedly a lack of signs and policemen, causing many motorists to get lost within the complex.[4]

In January 2009, a notice issued to pedestrians walking to the customs complex caused confusion among pedestrians and the Singapore custom authorities. Government officials have noted the danger of walking into the customs complex, and proposed a ban on pedestrians. This led to a critical response from pedestrians, who complained of the massive jams that they often faced, as well as noting that the structure of the road leading up to the complex was extremely dangerous and unsuitable for pedestrians. Pedestrians entering Malaysia are required to walk an additional 1 kilometre of arduous uphill terrain after crossing the causeway as the current Sultan Iskandar Building is located further away from the old CIQ Complex which used to be just right after the causeway, thereby bringing the total walking distance to 2 kilometers.[5]

Occupants of the Sultan Iskandar CIQ Complex and JB Sentral

See also

References

  1. ^ Bangunan CIQ mula beroperasi Selasa (CIQ Began Operating Tuesday) 8 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine (in Malay) 14 December 2008, Utusan Malaysia
  2. ^ New JB checkpoint 5 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine, Diana Othman, 2 December 2008, The Straits Times
  3. ^ , 17 December 2008, The Star
  4. ^ Cheryl Lim Mei Ling, Traffic jams, confusion at newly opened Malaysian checkpoint, 16 December 2008, Channel NewsAsia
  5. ^ Confusion over Causeway walk ban 24 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine, 7 January 2009, Esther Tan, Asiaone News

External links

southern, integrated, gateway, coordinates, 46361, 76417, 46361, 76417, malay, gerbang, selatan, bersepadu, refers, complex, bukit, chagar, johor, bahru, johor, malaysia, incorporating, city, main, railway, station, sentral, customs, immigration, quarantine, c. Coordinates 1 27 49 N 103 45 51 E 1 46361 N 103 76417 E 1 46361 103 76417 The Southern Integrated Gateway Malay Gerbang Selatan Bersepadu refers to a complex at Bukit Chagar Johor Bahru Johor Malaysia incorporating the city s main railway station JB Sentral and a customs immigration and quarantine complex CIQ the Sultan Iskandar Building Malay Bangunan Sultan Iskandar named after Almarhum Sultan Iskandar ibni Almarhum Sultan Ismail of Johor Southern Integrated GatewayMalay Gerbang Selatan BersepaduTamil த ற க ஒர ங க ண ந த ந ழ வ ய ல General informationTypeBorder controlLocationJohor Bahru Johor MalaysiaGroundbreaking14 February 2003 20 years ago 2003 02 14 Construction started2 December 2003 19 years ago 2003 12 02 Opened16 December 2008 14 years ago 2008 12 16 The station and complex are the main transportation hub of Johor Bahru and southern Peninsular Malaysia The Malaysian Public Works Department was responsible for the design and construction of the project Gerbang Perdana Sdn Bhd was the main contractor This project is part of the Iskandar Malaysia development corridor project The CIQ complex was opened to vehicular traffic on 16 December 2008 As of October 2010 update the JB Sentral railway station entered operation and service to the old Johor Bahru railway station ceased Contents 1 Benefits of the project 2 History 2 1 Events 3 Main components 3 1 Sultan Iskandar Building 3 2 JB Sentral transportation hub 3 3 Links to other roads 4 Critical reception 5 Occupants of the Sultan Iskandar CIQ Complex and JB Sentral 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksBenefits of the project EditThe project sought to improve the traffic flow within Johor Bahru Central Business District The regional road network was enhanced by the linking of the CIQ complex to the North South Expressway via the Johor Bahru Inner Ring Road The project also improved the transportation links between Johor Bahru and Singapore 1 The project was intended to also attract Singaporean tourists to Johor Bahru and the rest of Johor because of the improved transportation link which increases convenience and decreases travelling time History EditEvents Edit Construction of the road leading to highway Bangunan Sultan Iskandar Customs Immigration and Quarantine centre under construction in 2006 Start End EventEnd of 2002 The new CIQ complex is proposed Early 2003 The Lumba Kuda flats and other structures including Kampung Ungku Mohsin and Bukit Cagar recreational park are demolished 14 February 2003 The Southern Integrated Gateway is officially launched by Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad then Prime Minister of Malaysia 2 December 2003 Construction of CIQ complex begins 10 March 2006 The pilings for the new scenic bridge are completed 12 April 2006 The construction of the new Tanjung Puteri road bridge replacing Malaysian side of causeway was cancelled 26 April 2006 The 250 million Ringgit eight lane straight elevated permanent link from Causeway to the new CIQ complex in Bukit Chagar was proposed by the Ministry of Works and Gerbang Perdana 30 July 2006 The Johor state government announces plans to build a new Johor Bahru Maglev monorail transit system It will connect JB Sentral to Tebrau City in the east and JB Sentral to Skudai in the west 18 January 2007 The construction of the short term access temporary road begins 1 June 2007 30 June 2007 Beam launching works for Tanjung Puteri Bridge as part of the short term access 1 July 2007 The new Custom Immigration and Quarantine Complex building is occupied by the user departments Mid 2008 The Bukit Cagar flats are demolished 1 December 2008 The new Custom Immigration and Quarantine CIQ Complex building is officially named the Sultan Iskandar Complex by the Sultan of Johor The customs complex was opened to cars and motorcycles entering Johor Bahru on the same day 2 16 December 2008 The Sultan Iskandar Complex is opened to all road traffic 21 October 2010 JB Sentral opens for railway operations 12 November 2011 New 8 lane straight road opened to all road trafficMain components EditSultan Iskandar Building Edit Immigration checkpoint to enter Johor Bahru See also Sultan Iskandar Building dd JB Sentral transportation hub Edit See also Johor Bahru railway station and Bukit Chagar RTS station Entrance to JB Sentral lit at night Johor Bahru Sentral railway station or in short form JB Sentral is the transport hub for Johor Bahru similar to KL Sentral in Kuala Lumpur The total area of JB Sentral is 79 000 square metres 850 000 sq ft almost two times larger than KL Sentral 42 000 m2 or 450 000 sq ft The hub has a KTM railway station opened on 21 October 2010 and a bus station which occupies an area of 9 500 square metres 102 000 sq ft The bus station is expected to handle approximately 15 000 bus passengers per hour reducing traffic congestion at the 20 year old Larkin Terminal Station There are 2 000 parking spaces allocated at JB Sentral The trains operate in a north south orientation The site s western boundary is constrained by the Caltex petrol station abutting the rail track fencing Jalan Jim Quee to the east has a platform level up to 8 metres 26 ft higher which slopes to the rail tracks The terminal is designed to operate six rail lines and four island platforms 530 m 8 m or 1 739 ft 26 ft on a straight alignment The JB Sentral building is designed to fit this narrow site by placing the passenger hall and ticketing offices directly above the rail tracks with escalators and lifts providing access to the rail platforms below A pedestrian bridge connects JB Sentral to Johor Bahru City Square the Tun Abdul Razak Complex A new station for the Johor Bahru Singapore Rapid Transit System that connects to the Singapore MRT at Woodlands North will be built at Bukit Chagar located north of JB Sentral by 2024 Links to other roads Edit Bangunan Sultan Iskandar seen from car heading towards Jalan Lingkaran Dalam The 250 million Ringgit eight lane straight elevated permanent link on the originally planned flyover bridge is a main road from the Johor Singapore Causeway to the new CIQ complex The old checkpoint for light vehicles the Tanjung Puteri Customs Complex for heavy vehicles and the old checkpoint bridge were demolished starting in May 2009 There is a flyover connecting this project to the Johor Bahru Inner Ring Road and a new highway the Johor Bahru Eastern Dispersal Link which links the Southern Integrated Gateway to the interchange of the North South Expressway Southern Route near Pandan The construction of the new Permas Jaya second bridge commenced in 2008 Critical reception EditOn its opening day on 16 December 2008 motorists entering Malaysia from Singapore were greeted by a plague of problems such as long queues and traffic confusion Public transport was also badly affected some commuters said that crossing the causeway took them almost two hours rather than 15 minutes as it had with the old checkpoint 3 Although the new checkpoint boasts 76 lanes for cars these 76 lanes split from only one lane that enters the complex This is because there are only two lanes entering the complex Of these one is for cars and one is for buses and other vehicles There was also reportedly a lack of signs and policemen causing many motorists to get lost within the complex 4 In January 2009 a notice issued to pedestrians walking to the customs complex caused confusion among pedestrians and the Singapore custom authorities Government officials have noted the danger of walking into the customs complex and proposed a ban on pedestrians This led to a critical response from pedestrians who complained of the massive jams that they often faced as well as noting that the structure of the road leading up to the complex was extremely dangerous and unsuitable for pedestrians Pedestrians entering Malaysia are required to walk an additional 1 kilometre of arduous uphill terrain after crossing the causeway as the current Sultan Iskandar Building is located further away from the old CIQ Complex which used to be just right after the causeway thereby bringing the total walking distance to 2 kilometers 5 Occupants of the Sultan Iskandar CIQ Complex and JB Sentral EditDepartment of Immigration Malaysia Royal Customs Department Malaysia Malaysian Road Transport Department PLUS Expressway Berhad Royal Malaysian Police Keretapi Tanah Melayu Veterinary Service Department Ministry of Home Security Affairs Malaysian Timber Industrial Board Malaysian Fisheries Development Authority Federal Agricultural Marketing Authority Johor s State Land and Mines Office Perhilitan Johor s State Agriculture Department Johor s State Health Department Majlis Bandaraya Johor Bahru MBJB Tourism MalaysiaSee also EditSouth Johor Economic RegionReferences Edit Bangunan CIQ mula beroperasi Selasa CIQ Began Operating Tuesday Archived 8 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine in Malay 14 December 2008 Utusan Malaysia New JB checkpoint Archived 5 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine Diana Othman 2 December 2008 The Straits Times Crawl at CIQ complex checkpoint on first day 17 December 2008 The Star Cheryl Lim Mei Ling Traffic jams confusion at newly opened Malaysian checkpoint 16 December 2008 Channel NewsAsia Confusion over Causeway walk ban Archived 24 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine 7 January 2009 Esther Tan Asiaone NewsExternal links EditJB Sentral KTM Railway Station Updates on Johor Bahru CIQ Gerbang Perdana Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Southern Integrated Gateway amp oldid 1135365139, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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