The old town in Ipoh, now called concubine lane or plan B is the key for tin mining in Ipoh and nearby towns. Now this place had been revived by the existing next of kin and today it's a tourist attraction. When the tin mine collapsed in the early 1980, All the towns economy collapsed.
At this point you were only 12.5km from the unfinished 19th century mansion called Kellie's Castle. 16.4km away there's a giant tin-mining craft called Tanjung Tualang Tin Dredge No. 5. @12:16 that's not an iguana, but a monitor lizard. They are very timid, always run away when approached.
We’ve been to Kellie’s Castle but they were charging us around 50/100$ to film or something like that so it wasn’t worth it; the tin mining would’ve been nice to see! Next time maybe 🥰🙏❤️
I've not seen many abandoned places, probably bcoz I want to avoid them. But in Perak, there was a resort called Teluk Dalam Resort on d island of Pangkor, quite beautiful, been there twice, but sadfully, it's now closed n abandoned. And there was another place that is quite creepy, a UITM training center in Batu Gajah, d main building cannot accommodate all d participants, so some of them r placed in few bungalows in d huge compound, n it seemed that there were many abandoned bungalows, creepy, in this area. There's also a place called Kelly Castle in Perak, previously abandoned, n if I'm not mistaken, it's been partly restored for visitors.
Should visit Istana Billah, used to be a palace/castle now abandoned, very scary and a few people have met 2 old lady ghosts there who act like humans and welcome people who visits the abandoned castle and show them around. After leaving the palace a few of the people investigate about who are the 2 old ladies and ask the people who lives nearby and neighbour to the palace, those people doesn't knows or ever met those 2 old ladies, they aren't humans. And these people met the 2 old lady ghosts during daytime.
In the Papan village, you can also find an abandoned Royal Palace where the movie Anna & The King was filmed. Next to the palace is also an abandoned mosque.
Hi guys check out little India in Ipoh tommorrow is deepavali celebration and nice decoration in little India Ipoh for deepavali celebration. Have a good day ahead.
If abandoned places tickle your fancy, then I recommend MAPS Theme Park. It closed permanently right before the first C19 lockdown. The Theme Park is just outside of Ipoh, so if you guys are still around that area, its worth a visit.
There is one name that you should look up when you talk about the small town of Papan. The name is Sybil Kathigasu. A World War2 hero. She wrote a book titled No Dram of Mercy. Her grave is in Ipoh.🥲 In fact there is a museum/memorial in Papan , which used to be her clinic during WW2.
The size of the cemetery depends on how rich the deceased and family. One have to pay for the land to bury someone ino the cemetery.. The bigger the cemetery the cost is higher
Interesting 😀but that is the case almost everywhere: it’s the government’s mafia system all over the world 🌎you’re not done paying even after you die!😭
A Chinese tomb for one person requires a relatively large space. 1 Chinese grave equals 3-4 ordinary graves. no wonder Chinese cemeteries require a large area.
@@romaniansontheroad the thought of our body rotting just a few feets under the soil creeps me out. It's grotesque. When I die I prefer to be cremated so my family don't have creepy thoughts about my corpse in a box.😬
@@romaniansontheroad The crashing of Tin prices in the 1980s drove away many of Papan’s residents to migrate to other towns. There was also a radioactive waste disposal plant that was built there in 1984 (Asia Rare Earth, ARE) which caused greater fear of side effects, causing even more residents to move away. By 1992, ARE was finally shut down after many years of protest from the residents, but by then, Papan was already almost empty. Papan was originally established in the 1820s and started out as a timber town (the word Papan in the Malay language means Plank). When tin was discovered in the 1850s, many Chinese workers started to migrate to work and live there.
Because of your video......TOMORROW morning I'm going .
Will travel from Penang early in the morning.
Thanks for sharing.
Thank you for your feedback and support 🙌🙏🥰have fun 🥰and take proper clothes that cover everything because there’s mosquitoes 🥰
Beautifull🇲🇾🙋thank you for sharing..i'm waiting for the next video which is even more interesting
Yes, we did find amazing 🤩 stuff 😍
The old town in Ipoh, now called concubine lane or plan B is the key for tin mining in Ipoh and nearby towns. Now this place had been revived by the existing next of kin and today it's a tourist attraction. When the tin mine collapsed in the early 1980, All the towns economy collapsed.
Thank you 🙏 for educating us, much appreciated 🙏🥰
At this point you were only 12.5km from the unfinished 19th century mansion called Kellie's Castle. 16.4km away there's a giant tin-mining craft called Tanjung Tualang Tin Dredge No. 5. @12:16 that's not an iguana, but a monitor lizard. They are very timid, always run away when approached.
We’ve been to Kellie’s Castle but they were charging us around 50/100$ to film or something like that so it wasn’t worth it; the tin mining would’ve been nice to see! Next time maybe 🥰🙏❤️
@@romaniansontheroad I've made s treet v iew sets of both places so check them out.
A charming town full of mystical appeal waiting to be realized.
We loved it 😍😻
@@romaniansontheroad Propose to Romanian govt to twin Bran with Papan.
Guys guys u r very unique. U seem to explore everything in Msia. But i luv it😊. Keep it up.
Thank you ser! Much appreciated your support!🥰🙏
Thanks for sharing this video. U guys found it again, a creepy abandoned place.
I've not seen many abandoned places, probably bcoz I want to avoid them. But in Perak, there was a resort called Teluk Dalam Resort on d island of Pangkor, quite beautiful, been there twice, but sadfully, it's now closed n abandoned. And there was another place that is quite creepy, a UITM training center in Batu Gajah, d main building cannot accommodate all d participants, so some of them r placed in few bungalows in d huge compound, n it seemed that there were many abandoned bungalows, creepy, in this area. There's also a place called Kelly Castle in Perak, previously abandoned, n if I'm not mistaken, it's been partly restored for visitors.
U guys probably know this, in Perak n Selangor, there r many abandoned tin mines. Malaysia was once d world's top export for tin ore.
Thank you 🙏 we tried to do Kellie’s but they charge extra for camera 🎥 and we said no thank you! 😆
@@romaniansontheroad Hahaha, yes, no, thank u. 😁
I'll be in Papan 2 weeks ago on 14,15,16 September 2024 for Papan Retro Day 2024, it's totally different now
@@Salzuan84 is it really? How so?🤯🔥
@@romaniansontheroad we're doing Colonial Historical Reenactment for Malaya at that time 1930 until 1957 uniform era
Should visit Istana Billah, used to be a palace/castle now abandoned, very scary and a few people have met 2 old lady ghosts there who act like humans and welcome people who visits the abandoned castle and show them around. After leaving the palace a few of the people investigate about who are the 2 old ladies and ask the people who lives nearby and neighbour to the palace, those people doesn't knows or ever met those 2 old ladies, they aren't humans. And these people met the 2 old lady ghosts during daytime.
We wanted to but we stayed to far from it with the scooter so we abandoned the idea 😉😆🥰
In the Papan village, you can also find an abandoned Royal Palace where the movie Anna & The King was filmed. Next to the palace is also an abandoned mosque.
Thank you 🙏🥰
You can try visit tempurung cave
Thank you 🙏🥰
Hi guys check out little India in Ipoh tommorrow is deepavali celebration and nice decoration in little India Ipoh for deepavali celebration. Have a good day ahead.
Thank you 🙏🥰
If abandoned places tickle your fancy, then I recommend MAPS Theme Park. It closed permanently right before the first C19 lockdown. The Theme Park is just outside of Ipoh, so if you guys are still around that area, its worth a visit.
We left unfortunately already 🙏🥰would’ve been nice 😍
Shld look for istana papan for more eerie experience
Thank you for your recommendation 🥰🙏
Cairful ...this place , like werry dangerous ....god bless you..🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Always careful 😆
Please be careful when visiting these abandoned places. Sometimes the drug addicts and bad characters loom around these places
So far we managed to avoid them😆🥰
It will be more interesting if you re-visit these abandoned buildings (heaven) around midnight.
But then we wouldn’t see all the details which makes it spectacular for us 😉
There is one name that you should look up when you talk about the small town of Papan. The name is Sybil Kathigasu. A World War2 hero. She wrote a book titled No Dram of Mercy. Her grave is in Ipoh.🥲 In fact there is a museum/memorial in Papan , which used to be her clinic during WW2.
Thank you 🙏🥰
The size of the cemetery depends on how rich the deceased and family. One have to pay for the land to bury someone ino the cemetery.. The bigger the cemetery the cost is higher
Interesting 😀but that is the case almost everywhere: it’s the government’s mafia system all over the world 🌎you’re not done paying even after you die!😭
A Chinese tomb for one person requires a relatively large space. 1 Chinese grave equals 3-4 ordinary graves. no wonder Chinese cemeteries require a large area.
Seems like everything in their culture is for opulence 🙏and $$$🥰
@@romaniansontheroad the thought of our body rotting just a few feets under the soil creeps me out. It's grotesque. When I die I prefer to be cremated so my family don't have creepy thoughts about my corpse in a box.😬
What was the smell inside? It must be stink, I bet...?
Carefull you guys!
Indeed 😆 and that smell of putrefaction from tree leaves combined with mold 😆🥰
If you want real jungle, please go to Taman Negara Pahang
Thank you 🙏🥰
Mining for TIN.
How come they stopped? Resources finished?🥰
@@romaniansontheroad The crashing of Tin prices in the 1980s drove away many of Papan’s residents to migrate to other towns. There was also a radioactive waste disposal plant that was built there in 1984 (Asia Rare Earth, ARE) which caused greater fear of side effects, causing even more residents to move away. By 1992, ARE was finally shut down after many years of protest from the residents, but by then, Papan was already almost empty.
Papan was originally established in the 1820s and started out as a timber town (the word Papan in the Malay language means Plank). When tin was discovered in the 1850s, many Chinese workers started to migrate to work and live there.
@@ld-n1648 thank you 🙏🥰
Take care! oh very dangerous poisonous animals, copra, centipedes, sharp objects, be careful
We survived so far 😆🥰🙏
you guys are really into non touristy places,aren't you?
Yes ser! We loved 🥰 exploring this little town 😆🥰😍
@@romaniansontheroad good for you ser
Kind of Netflix - stranger things huh
We absolutely loved it 😍 part 2 is coming and more interesting 😆🥰
Hopefully you are not Mossad agent.
Hopefully 🙏😆😉🥰