Culture & Lifestyle

Moat at Penang’s Fort Cornwallis to be completed by July

The moat is defined as an ancient deep, wide ditch surrounding a castle, fort, or town, usually filled - up with water and intended traditionally as a defense against attacks.

Updated 1 year ago · Published on 23 May 2025 9:13AM

Moat at Penang’s Fort Cornwallis to be completed by July
The total investment in the project is about RM23.4 million. - May 23, 2025

by Ian McIntyre

THE reinstalment of the moat at Penang’s oldest landmark – Fort Cornwallis in the Esplanade will be completed by July while its adjacent food court will be reopened next month.

This was conveyed to the state delegation, who visited both sites last night.

The moat took some three years of renovations and research before it could finally be unveiled as another attraction to the fort built by seafarer Francis Light, who had established Penang as a regional port in 1786.

The moat is defined as an ancient deep, wide ditch surrounding a castle, fort, or town, usually filled - up with water and intended traditionally as a defense against attacks.

Chief Minister Chow Kon Yeow said the southern moat at Fort Cornwallis was restored last year and work on the western moat is ongoing.

It is expected to be completed by July, said Chow.

The total investment in the project is about RM23.4 million.

Of this, RM15.3 million has been funded by the state government, with additional support from re-urbanisation specialist - Think City Sdn Bhd and Yayasan Hasanah.

 “The restored moat uses traditional building methods and materials. Built on-site within a modular grid, it’s designed for long-term stability and the completed southern and western moats now form a 4,000sq m water basin, 0.9 metres deep, and can hold about 3,600 cubic metres of water," said Cow.

The upgrading aligns with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), particularly in the areas of sponge city model, ecological biodiversity, climate adaptation environmental awareness and community engagement.

Meanwhile, the food court called "Astaka Kota Selera" will have 26 food counters and can seat up to 224 patrons, with new social amenities such as accessible public restrooms, and facilities for the disabled, including ramps and barrier - free access.

The food haven among others have signature dishes such as "mee mamak, chicken chop, nasi lemak and bee hoon Singapore."

In another development, the state legislative assembly which adjourned its sitting "sine die" yesterday, passed two bills aimed at sustainability.

A majority of the 40 backbenchers, including the state government passed the bill entitled Penang Water Resources Bill 2025.

It is to manage the state’s water resources in an integrated, holistic and sustainable manner.

The sitting also passed the Penang Water Resources Board Bill 2025, along with two motions: the Special Report of the Committee on Standing Orders of the Penang Legislative Assembly, and the activation of the Select Committee on Federal - State Relations.

The select committee is headed by Jawi assemblyman Lee Khai Loon, who will deliberate about securing more autonomy from the federal government on finance matters. - May 23, 2025.

Related News

People / 20h

Koh Tsu Koon – a former Penang CM who still serves the rakyat

Malaysia / 3d

Penang: CM defends allocations after claims from Kedah MB that it is just a ‘small state’

Malaysia / 1w

PSR project, respect court decision – Penang CM

Notes / 3w

Penang: Need for proper registration of Rohingya refugees, says CM

Events / 1mth

Penang launches sharing integrative platform to reduce shortage in key high-skilled areas

Malaysia / 1mth

‘Get your facts right’ – says CM over claims that Penang is going bankrupt

Spotlight

Malaysia

“I will meet him. He is also my friend,” Zahid says on Nga’s resignation remarks

Malaysia

King accords Singapore President full state welcome at Istana Negara

Malaysia

Sports YouTuber seriously injured in suspected assault at PJ petrol station (video)

Malaysia

PRN Johor: Take accountability, not blame others – former MP tells PH

Malaysia

Zara Qairina showed no evidence of persistent suicidal intent, psychologist tells court

Malaysia

DAP retains eight incumbents, unveils three new candidates for NS polls

Malaysia

Syed Saddiq: Court decision a strong endorsement of judicial independence

Sports & Fitness

France vs Spain World Cup 2026 semi-final set to be billion-dollar showdown