Malaysia Federal Route 5

Federal Route 5 shield}}
Federal Route 5
Route information
Length655.85 km (407.53 mi)
Existed1887[1]–present
HistoryCompleted in 1988[2]
Major junctions
North endJelapang, Perak
Major intersectionsROADS
FT 1 Federal Route 1
FT 95 Jalan Kukup
FT 96 Federal Route 96
FT 50 Federal Route 50
FT 85 Jalan Parit Yusuf
FT 224 Muar Bypass
FT 24 Federal Route 24
FT 23 Federal Route 23
FT 19 FT 5 Lebuh AMJ
FT 144 Federal Route 144
FT 264 Federal Route 264
FT 192 Jalan Syed Abdullah Aziz
FT 33 Lebuh SPA
FT 141 Federal Route 141
FT 140 Federal Route 140
FT 139 Federal Route 139
FT 138 Federal Route 138
Teluk Kemang Bypass
FT 219 Sua Betong–Sunggala Highway
FT 53 Federal Route 53
FT 2 Federal Route 2
FT 20 North Klang Straits Bypass
FT 3217 Jalan Perindustrian Kapar–Meru
FT 54 Federal Route 54
FT 69 Federal Route 69
FT 58 Federal Route 58
FT 18 Jalan Iskandar Shah
FT 100 Lumut Bypass
FT 60 Sitiawan Bypass
FT 312 Jalan Lapangan Terbang Sitiawan
FT 71 Federal Route 71
FT 72 Federal Route 72
FT 109 Federal Route 109
FT 73 Federal Route 73
FT 317 Jalan Kledang

EXPRESSWAYS
Shah Alam Expressway Shah Alam Expressway
New North Klang Straits Bypass AH141 New North Klang Straits Bypass
West Coast Expressway West Coast Expressway (U/C)
South endSkudai, Johor
Location
CountryMalaysia
Primary
destinations
Ipoh
Lumut
Teluk Intan
Sabak Bernam
Kuala Selangor
Klang
Port Dickson
Melaka
Muar
Batu Pahat
Senggarang
Rengit
Benut
Ayer Baloi
Pontian Kechil
Pekan Nanas
Kangkar Pulai
Skudai
Highway system

Federal Route 5 is one of the three north–south oriented backbone federal roads running along the west coast of Peninsular Malaysia, Malaysia.[3] The 655.85 kilometres (408 mi) federal highway runs from Jelapang, Perak in the north to Skudai, Johor in the south.[4]

  1. ^ Abd. Hamid Abd. Majid (1980-05-01). "1.1 - Sejarah Perkembangan Jalanraya Sebelum Merdeka" (PDF). Analisa Rangkaian Jalan Raya dan Kaitannya Dengan Pembangunan Ekonomi (Diploma). Universiti Teknologi MARA. p. 4. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-11-18.
  2. ^ "New bridge to open tomorrow". New Straits Times. 1988-11-16. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  3. ^ "Kenali rangkaian laluan tulang belakang negara kita". Blog Jalan Raya Malaysia (in Malay). 2014-11-01. Retrieved 2015-11-18.
  4. ^ "Statistik Jalan (Edisi 2013)". Statistik Jalan. Kuala Lumpur: Malaysian Public Works Department: 16–64. 2013. ISSN 1985-9619.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia · View on Wikipedia

Developed by Tubidy