Jalan Jelatek
Jalan Jelatek or Jalan Setiawangsa is a major road in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Jalan Jelatek | |
---|---|
Jalan Setiawangsa | |
Major junctions | |
North end | Wangsa Maju |
South end | Jalan Ampang |
Location | |
Primary destinations | Setiawangsa Taman Keramat Kampung Datuk Keramat |
Highway system | |
List of junctions
km | Exit | Junctions | To | Remarks | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wangsa Maju | North Jalan Mohd Yatim Yahaya (Jalan 54/26) Sri Rampai LRT station Jalan 34/26 West Section—until -- PKNS Industrial Area Setapak East Section—until -- Carrefour Wangsa Maju | Junctions | |||
Setiawangsa-DUKE | Duta–Sentul Pasar–Ulu Klang Link (Main Link) West Ipoh Gombak Batu Caves Kuantan Seremban KLCC City Centre Bulatan Pahang Sentul East Ulu Klang Ampang Cheras | 3-tier stacked interchange | |||
Jalan Setiawangsa | |||||
Jalan Jelatek | |||||
Muadz bin Jabal Mosque | |||||
Setiawangsa | West Jalan Abdul Rashid Desa Tun Hussein Onn East Jalan Taman Setiawangsa AU—until AU -- Ulu Klang | Junctions | |||
P&R Setiawangsa LRT station | Setiawangsa LRT station 🚉 5 | ||||
Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur DBKL border limit | |||||
Selangor–FT Kuala Lumpur border | |||||
Selangor Darul Ehsan Gombak district border MPAJ border limit | |||||
Selangor Darul Ehsan Gombak district border MPAJ border limit | |||||
FT Kuala Lumpur–Selangor border | |||||
Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur DBKL border limit | |||||
Taman Keramat | East Jalan Enggang Taman Keramat | Junctions | |||
Kampung Datuk Keramat | Jalan Keramat | No entry | |||
P&R Jelatek LRT station | Jelatek LRT station 🚉 5 | ||||
Kampung Datuk Keramat | West Jalan Datuk Keramat Kampung Datuk Keramat | Junctions | |||
Jelatek-AKLEH | West City centre Kuala Lumpur City Centre Jalan Ampang Jalan Tun Razak (MRR1) | From/To west only | |||
Jalan Ampang | West City Centre Kuala Lumpur City Centre Jalan Tun Razak (MRR1) East Ampang Ulu Klang | T-junctions |
gollark: I mean, that would be cooler but involve a lot of duplicated effort and complexity.
gollark: Oh, and a CC program to connect to that and run commands like "update" and "full restart" and "configure networking".
gollark: If I were to ever get round to implementing this, it would use Alpine or something similar, and just ship with CraftOS-PC automatically started on boot, as well as a websocket-accessible daemon to let it run commands on the real device.
gollark: Very "useful".
gollark: It would be "useful" if it used Linux or something and could thus do networking, control keys and stuff.
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