Datuk Chang Khim Wah: Using his competitive spirit to reach the top
I’m a competitive person.
I’m a competitive person.
The township of Bandar Botanic in Klang, Selangor, has won numerous awards over the years.
Gone are the days when S P Setia Bhd’s offices were located in a shopoffice.
Walking beside the lake at The Central Park in Desa ParkCity in Kuala Lumpur, it is hard to imagine that this award-winning township was once a quarry.
Kota Kemuning in Shah Alam, launched two decades ago in partnership with DRB-Hicom Bhd, marked Gamuda Bhd’s first foray into property development.
Penang’s street food, laid-back lifestyle and melting pot of cultures draw investors, visitors and would-be residents from near and far.
When Mulpha International Bhd first acquired almost 2,000 acres of oil palm land at Gelang Patah — the southernmost tip of Johor — a quarter of a century ago, little did the developer know that it was going to turn out into an award-winning property development.
A question in the final examination of Datuk Koe Peng Kang’s professional paper in engineering in the late 1990s has had a great influence on the Bandar Eco-Setia Sdn Bhd CEO’s approach to property development — that is, to protect the environment as much as possible during the development process.
For a very long time, Puncak Alam in Shah Alam North, Selangor, was just rubber and oil palm plantations.