Preceding stations Prior to the construction of the current Kuala Lumpur station, two stations were already operational in the city. The first railway station in Kuala Lumpur, nicknamed "Resident Station" due to its proximity to the
residence of British High Commissioner, was completed and located opposite to the
Royal Selangor Club (today
Dataran Merdeka) towards the west. Constructed of wood and a
nipah palm roof, the station was the first in Kuala Lumpur, linking Kuala Lumpur to
Klang (Pengkalan Batu) via the first railway line to connect the city with the rest of the
Malay Peninsula (officially inaugurated 22 September 1886). The second station, , was constructed in 1892 at Foch Avenue (now Tun Tan Cheng Lock Road), close to the present
Maybank Tower, the
Puduraya bus station and . Its design was based on Resident station, and was stationed along the Pudu railway line, a new line that branched off north from the 1910 station, and connected mines from
Ampang to the city. The line was unique in that the initial leg of the track approaching Sultan Street station from the main line was sandwiched between two carriageways of Foch Avenue, cutting across the east side of the city. Resident station was demolished after construction of the new Kuala Lumpur station was completed. Meanwhile, Sultan Street station was replaced by a smaller
terminal station when the tracks at Foch Avenue were dismantled for road traffic, and was demolished after 1960. The Ampang-linked route was partially reused by the LRT .
Design, construction and operation Arthur Benison Hubback, a British Architectural Assistant to the Director of Public Works, undertook the design of the station. He incorporated the unique Anglo-Asian architecture in the region on the station's design. The "
Neo-Moorish/
Mughal/
Indo-Saracenic/Neo-Saracenic" style was not uncommon at the time. Similar structures, such as the
Sultan Abdul Samad Building (credited to
A.C. Norman but largely designed by
R.A.J. Bidwell, completed 1897), the Old City Hall (designed by A.B. Hubback, completed 1904) and the
Jamek Mosque (designed by A.B. Hubback, completed 1909), pre-date Kuala Lumpur station. At a cost of
$23,000, the station was completed and operational on 1 August 1910. After the demolition of Resident Station and the isolation of Sultan Street station, the Kuala Lumpur station became the main railway station in Kuala Lumpur. A
railway hotel, the
Station Hotel (later renamed the
Heritage Station Hotel in 1996), occupied the northern sections of the central station and the upper floors of the station, boasting 170 rooms and an ornate lobby housing Charlies Restaurant & Bar as off the late-2000s. In 1995, access to
KTM Komuter services was introduced at the station. After the diversion of long-distance intercity rail traffic less than a kilometer south to
Kuala Lumpur Sentral on 15 April 2001, the original station's importance diminished. While intercity trains continue to pass the station, they no longer stop there, relegating the station to being a stop for KTM Komuter and goods services. As a result of declining passenger traffic and patronage, redundant station facilities, such as staffed ticket counters for intercity services, station offices and rented businesses spaces, were decommissioned or slowly vacated. The Heritage Station Hotel ceased operation in 2011 following declining patronage and a series of mismanaged renovations in the late-2000s; the hotel was briefly reopened in 2014 before closing the same year. While the side platforms of the original station, which have already been raised to a leveled height for smooth embarking and disembarking for intercity coaches, were readily usable from KTM Komuter trains, the configuration of the island platform and access to services in the first 15 years of KTM Komuter's service meant that the original station could not be maximised for use as a transportation stop for electric trains until 2009 renovations raised the last of the original platforms (
see platform). In the months leading up to 31 August 2007, the 50th anniversary of
Malaya's independence, various sources reported the transfer of various old railway equipment from a railway warehouse in Klang and a few other locations to the old Kuala Lumpur station. This included a small restored shunter and an antique fire engine. The station was officially reopened on 31 August 2007 as a railway museum (where exhibitions are placed in the main hall and platform of the station), and was mooted to be converted into a cultural centre.
Renovations, upgrades and changes The station has undergone several major changes in its modern history. The north wing was converted for office use by 1967, closing off the arched verandahs with windows. In 1986, the station was more extensively refurbished, with the interior and relevant windows replaced with modern counterparts while the exterior was repaired and preserved, and additional new facilities and buildings, including air-conditioned waiting halls, tourism information counters and snack bars. Parts of the station's original interior designs and frames are still present in the Heritage Station Hotel. The refurbishment also saw an additional extension built on the south wing of the building, sporting "Raj" stylings that dominates much of the building, and the addition of a frontal façade for the north wing that sports similar architectural elements, masking hints of Western designs from the front. These changes resulted in the building sporting two additional
chhatris, two on the corner of each wing, alongside the original four. Other modifications made onto the old building included the rear wall of the station carved open and extended to accommodate a new station entrance, taxi stops, several office and retail spaces, while additional double-storey retail spaces were constructed over one of the two adjacent frontal access roads to the main building. The 1986 remodelling also saw platform extensions to the north and a new station building in the area, which connected to the
Kuala Lumpur General Post Office at the then newly completed
Dayabumi Complex (constructed 1982 to 1984). When
KTM Komuter services were launched in 1995 to serve the
Rawang-Seremban Route and the
Sentul-Port Klang Route, ticket counters and
faregates were added to the station, in common with other KTM Komuter stations. The location of KTM Komuter facilities meant that only the newer island platform could be used by KTM Komuter trains (
see platform). After
Kuala Lumpur Sentral assumed the responsibility of receiving intercity operations, portions of station facilities designated for intercity services were decommissioned or removed. Limited intercity services were reintroduced to the station following the station's designation as an
KTM ETS stop in 2009. ==Platforms==