Ipoh–Lumut Highway
| Federal Route 5 | |
|---|---|
| Ipoh–Lumut Highway | |
| Route information | |
| Length | 70.7 km (43.9 mi) |
| Existed | 2004[1]–present |
| History | Completed in 2008[1] |
| Major junctions | |
| Northeast end | Jelapang, Ipoh |
| Southwest end | Sitiawan (East) |
| Location | |
| Country | Malaysia |
| Primary destinations | Ipoh, Jelapang, Menglembu, Seri Iskandar, Bota, Ayer Tawar, Sitiawan, Lumut, Pangkor Island |
| Highway system | |
Ipoh–Lumut Highway, Federal Route 5, is a 70.7-km federal highway in Perak, Malaysia, connecting the Perakian capital city of Ipoh in the east to Lumut near Sitiawan in the west.[2] The Ipoh–Lumut Highway consists of a 22.7-km super two highway from Jelapang to Seputeh and a 48-km divided highway from Seputeh to Lumut. This highway is a part of the Federal Route 5 and serves as the final section of the FT5 route.[3]
Many maps including Google Maps label this highway as the Ipoh–Lumut Expressway E19 (already corrected); however, this is incorrect because the Ipoh–Lumut Highway was built as an upgrade of the existing Ipoh–Lumut Road FT5 instead of being a completely new controlled-access expressway route, evidenced by only one grade-separated interchange at Seputeh compared with 34 signalised at-grade intersections along its entire route.[2][4] As a result, the Ipoh–Lumut Highway is signposted as FT5 and not E19 along its entire route. In addition, the Ipoh–Lumut Expressway E19 has never been included in the list of expressways being monitored by the Malaysian Highway Authority.[2] The E19 route number is currently reassigned to the Sungai Besi-Ulu Klang Elevated Expressway (SUKE) in Selangor and Kuala Lumpur.[5]
History
The Ipoh–Lumut Highway project is a revival of the Ipoh–Lumut Expressway project which was scrapped due to the effects of the 1997 Asian financial crisis.[2] Initially, the Ipoh–Lumut Expressway was supposed to be built as completely new controlled-access expressway route with the tentative route number of E19, with its construction job being privatised and awarded to SILEX Sdn. Bhd. (consisting Teras Cemara Sdn. Bhd. (subsidiary of MRCB) and Perak Corporation Berhad as its main shareholders) as its concessionaire.[6] The concession contract was announced on 20 June 1998;[6] however, the project was later scrapped.[2][7]
The Ipoh–Lumut Expressway project was later revived as an upgrade of the existing Ipoh–Lumut Road FT5,[7] consisting a new 22.7-km super two highway route from Seputeh to Jelapang that bypasses the old Jalan Lahat FT5,[2][8] and an upgrade of the 48-km section from Siputeh to Sitiawan to a 4-lane divided highway with partial access control.[1] Construction began on 1 June 2004 and was completed on 28 February 2008.[1] Once completed, the old Jalan Lahat FT5 was degazetted as a Federal Road and was downgraded to a municipal road without any route number.[2]
There is only one grade-separated interchange at Seputeh and 34 signalised intersections along the entire highway, making the entire end-to-end trip to take about 90 minutes. In 2012, the state government of Perak had urged the federal government to upgrade the super two section to a full divided highway to improve traffic flow and travelling time.[4]
Junction lists
The entire route is located in Perak.
Legend:
- I/C - Interchange, I/S - Intersection, RSA - Rest and service area, OBR - Overhead bridge restaurant, R/R - Restaurant and rest plaza, L/B - Layby, V/P - Vista point, TN - tunnel, T/P - Toll plaza, BR - Bridge
| District | Km | Exit | Name | Destinations | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kinta | Ipoh Jelapang I/S |
T-junctions | |||
| Ipoh Jelapang Square |
Jelapang Square, Jelapang Econsave | T-junctions | |||
| Taman Puncak Jelapang Maju | |||||
| Puncak Jelapang | |||||
| Ipoh Silibin I/S |
Jalan Silibin – Silibin, Manjoi, Ipoh City Centre | T-junctions | |||
| Ipoh Kledang I/S |
Jalan Kledang Utara – Taman Kledang Permai, Ipoh City Centre | Junctions | |||
| Menglembu Menglembu I/S |
Junctions | ||||
| Lahat Lahat I/S |
Jalan Lahat – Lahat, Ipoh City Centre | T-junctions | |||
| Papan Papan I/S |
Junctions | ||||
| Taman Batu Gajah Perdana | |||||
| Pusing Pusing I/S |
Junctions | ||||
| Pusing I/S | T-junctions | ||||
| Seputeh Seputeh I/C |
Diamond interchanges | ||||
| Tronoh | |||||
| Jalan Tronoh I/S | T-junctions | ||||
| Perak Tengah | Kampung Jalan Bota | ||||
| UTP I/S | Universiti Teknologi Petronas (UTP) |
T-junctions | |||
| Seri Iskandar Bandar Universiti Seri Iskandar I/S |
Jalan Teknologi 1 – Bandar Universiti Seri Iskandar, Seri Iskandar Business Centre (SIBC) | T-junctions | |||
| UITM Seri Iskandar I/S | Universiti Teknologi MARA (UiTM) Seri Iskandar |
T-junctions | |||
| Seri Iskandar Seri Iskandar I/S |
Jalan Seri Iskandar – Perak Tengah District and Land Office, Perak Tengah District Mosque | T-junctions | |||
| Seri Iskandar Jalan Parit-Seri Iskandar I/S |
Jalan Parit–Seri Iskandar – Parit, Institut Kemahiran Belia Negara (IKBN) Seri Iskandar |
T-junctions | |||
| Bota Bota Kanan |
Makam Sultan Muzaffar Shah III Ibni Almarhum Yang Dipertuan Muda Mansur Shah | Historical site | |||
| Bota Bota Kanan Bota Kanan I/S |
Junctions | ||||
| BR | Sungai Perak Bridge Sultan Idris Shah II Bridge |
||||
| Bota Bota Kiri Bota Kiri I/S |
Junctions | ||||
| Titi Gantung | |||||
| Taman Indera Barat | |||||
| Jalan Gelang Pepuyu I/S | T-junctions | ||||
| Jalan Beruas I/S | T-junctions | ||||
| Kampung Changkat Chermin–WCE I/C | T-junctions | ||||
| Perak Tengah–Manjung district border | Manjung Border Arch | ||||
| Manjung | Jalan Changkat Keruing I/S | T-junctions | |||
| Ayer Tawar | |||||
| Kampung Sungai Wang Kampung Sungai Wang I/S |
T-junctions | ||||
| Sitiawan Siitawan East I/S |
T-junctions | ||||
| Through to | |||||
See also
- Malaysia Federal Route 5
Sungai Besi–Ulu Klang Elevated Expressway - current highway assigned to E19 route number
References
- ^ a b c d "Projek Pembangunan RMKe-9 Kementerian Kerja Raya: Projek Siap 2008" (PDF) (in Malay). Malaysian Ministry of Works. Retrieved 11 September 2015.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Mythbuster: Lebuhraya Ipoh-Lumut FT5 bukan sebuah lebuh raya ekspres capaian terkawal...!!!". Blog Jalan Raya Malaysia (in Malay). 7 September 2015. Retrieved 11 September 2015.
- ^ Inventori Rangkaian Jalan Utama Persekutuan Semenanjung Malaysia. Kuala Lumpur: Malaysian Ministry of Works. 2009. ISBN 978-983-44278-2-5.
- ^ a b "Naik taraf Lebuh Raya Ipoh-Lumut". Utusan Malaysia. 4 November 2012. Retrieved 11 September 2015.
- ^ "SUKE contacts". Archived from the original on 4 August 2017. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
- ^ a b "Senarai nama mereka yang memperolehi projek penswastaan". Utusan Malaysia (in Malay). 21 June 1998. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2015.
- ^ a b Kay Lyy Lat (29 March 2003). "Kerajaan negeri harap Lebuhraya Ipoh-Lumut diteruskan" (PDF). Perdana Leadership Foundation. Bernama. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2015.
- ^ "Jawapan-jawapan Lisan bagi Pertanyaan-pertanyaan (14 Oktober 2002)" (PDF) (in Malay). Parliament of Malaysia. 14 October 2002.
