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Malacca Island

Malacca Island (Malay: Pulau Melaka) is a man-made island approximately 0.5 km off the coast of Malacca City, the capital city of the Malaysian state of Malacca, just south of its business district Melaka Raya. It was part of the “Twin Island City Centre” waterfront project undertaken by Pulau Kembar Sdn Bhd (formerly Inno Enhance Sdn Bhd), a defunct joint-venture of Larut Consolidated Berhad and Talam Corporation Berhad, which involved the reclamation of two islands measuring 40ha and 50ha respectively.[1][2]

The Malacca Island development project, launched in May 1996 by then-Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, was planned to comprise mixed residential and commercial development together with leisure-cum-tourism amenities such as marine theme park, marina, hotels and waterfront activities. It was the first artificial island project and the only twin-island development project in the country. The reclamation of the first island of 40ha and a 300m bridge linking to the mainland had been completed so far, but the second island was never built, with the project experienced numerous completion delays since construction began.[3][4]

Following the dissolution of the original developer and the subsequent abandonment of its twin-island project, KAJ Development Sdn Bhd intervened and revived the project under the name of Melaka Gateway. The revived project was planned to have four artificial islands with additional port and industrial zone facilities, including one planned island and this island under the original developer and one adjacent natural island – Panjang Island (Malay: Pulau Panjang).[5] However, due to a series of obstacles, the project was scaled down to only this island alone with a cruise terminal.[6]

Notable infrastructures

Cancelled development projects

See also

References

  1. ^ Pulau Melaka project logs sales of RM150m
  2. ^ RM2b project a catalyst for Malacca
  3. ^ Housebuyers to meet Pulau Berkembar developer over completion delay
  4. ^ Abandoned housing and commercial projects: Call on the Prime Minister to solve the problem before his retirement
  5. ^ Melaka Gateway 2018 Archived Website
  6. ^ Tham Siew Yean (15 February 2024). "The Return of Melaka Gateway: Scaled-down Ambitions". fulcrum.sg.

2°10′51″N 102°15′06″E / 2.1807°N 102.2516°E / 2.1807; 102.2516