
An old curious looking door spray-painted with the word “Narnia”.
Category: George Town / Island
George Town Street View: DOWNING STREET
Named after the famous Downing Street in London, the British built their government offices on this street in George Town, Penang during the colonial era. It is one of the oldest and historical streets in George Town and currently houses the state post office and the HSBC bank.
Passing through Armenian Street
Penang Street Art (The Bread Seller)

This steel sculpture can be found on a wall of a shophouse along King Street, part of the Little India area in George Town. The caricature depicts a local ‘Roti Benggali’ (or Benggali Bread) seller and what it means by the word ‘Benggali’. The freshly baked and rather big loaf Benggali bread is popular among the locals here, usually sold from a small makeshift stall on a motorcycle. It was said that the bread derived its name from the word ‘Penggali’, which basically means ‘shareholders’ in Tamil. The bread business was started by an Indian Muslim together with his group of friends (a co-op business) back in the 1930s. Local residents later mistook the name to be ‘Roti Benggali’ and the bread has been called as such ever since.
Penang Street Art (‘A Patch of Blue’)

A small brick portion of the old wall along Ah Quee Street in George Town was painted in blue.
A Corner Shophouse
An old shophouse at the junction of Beach Street and Ah Quee Street in George Town.
Bukit Tambun Fishing Village
Dawn at Beach Street
Klang Street: Pre-War Townhouses
Klang Street: An Old Signpost
An old Klang Street signpost standing next to the narrowest five foot way in George Town.











