Lake Garden (Taman Tasik Perdana)

ManFriday
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Editor Pick

The Orchid Gardens of Lake Garden

  • September 26, 2025
  • Rated 5 of 5 by koshkha from Northampton, United Kingdom

Kuala Lumpur is a great city and one where visitors are spoilt for choice with so many and varied options for entertainment. Being a country girl, I find big cities drain the life out of me very quickly and I can easily get overwhelmed by the hustle and bustle. When that happens, I’ll try to find somewhere clean, quiet and peaceful to feed my need to escape. If it’s beautiful and interesting as well, then that’s a big bonus.

Such escape might seem like a tall order in a full-on high-octane shopping-frenzy city like KL so the purpose of this review is to share my top tip for regaining your sanity. The answer is the Orchid Garden in KL Lake Gardens.

KL Lake Gardens (or Taman Tasik Perdana) lies up a hill over-looking the city. There is probably a bus service up there but the two times I've been I have taken taxis. Surprisingly, even that can be a problem. Getting up there is relatively easy – just grab a cab at any taxi stand in the city - but getting back can be a struggle. The gardens don’t seem to be on the standard KL taxi driver's prowling route so you can struggle to find a cab when you are ready to head back to town. You may have to loiter outside the entrance to the Orchid Gardens or one of the other attractions and wait for another visitor to arrive in a taxi. Then you should pounce and grab their driver for the return journey.

Last time we asked the driver who took us to come back an hour later. If you aren’t sure how long you will be, take his driver’s mobile number and call him 20 mins before you need him - drivers in KL are very accommodating and most of the younger ones speak understandable English – I think they learned for the Commonwealth Games a few years ago. From memory, I think we paid around £5 for the ride each way - it won't break the bank.

If this all sounds like a bit too much trouble take my word for it, it's not. The KL Orchid Gardens are worth the bother. They have more than 2000 different species of orchid - including more than 800 that are native to Malaysia.

~Getting in~

Once your taxi driver works out where to drop you - not always the right place but don't worry it'll be in the right area more or less - you stroll up a sloping driveway to the gardens. I would imagine this would be a bit of a tough push for someone in a wheelchair or with restricted mobility so please bear that in mind.

There's a little booth half way up to take your money but there was nobody there last time I went so we just strolled on in. In fact, I think they may have stopped charging entrance fees.

The gardens are surprisingly low-key and understated. There’s not a lot of information around the place, so you won't feel guilty about not reading lots of labels and writing down lots of names. You can just wander around, through the open gardens and the pergolas, sit down, watch the birds and butterflies, take a few photos and forget that just minutes away the streets are filled with noisy car horns and aggression. It’s a really great place to unwind.

Arrive at the right time and they may have the sprinklers on in the pergolas - soak it up! It's good enough for the orchids and you'll dry off very quickly.

My most recent visit was in September 2005 on a very hot and sticky day at about 4 pm. At that time there were no more than 3 or 4 other people up there. It was paradise.

The gardens close at 6 pm

~Need retail therapy? ~

There is an orchid market where you can buy plants or - if you are planning on bringing them back to the UK - you can buy a conical flask full of seedlings that can be planted up when you get home. Allegedly these are UK customs compliant but I’m not so sure whether you’d want to try a flask sweaty little baby orchids in your hand luggage during the current hand-luggage restrictions. There’s no hard sell at the market - just people who love orchids and are happy to talk about them. I brought back some baby orchids from my parents who nurtured them for a couple of months and then went on holiday and forgot all about them. I think a couple may survive in spite of the neglect.

~What else can you do?~

Also on the Lake Gardens site you will find the bird park and the butterfly park. The butterflies are spectacular so make sure you have your camera and any macro lenses with you - entrance is 4 ringitt. The bird park is also a raucous but fun place to visit. Allegedly it's the largest in South East Asia but whilst it's good, it's not as outstanding as the Singapore bird park so if you are doing a trip to Malaysia and Singapore, hold out for the Singapore bird park instead. I believe entrance is free for the bird park.

Other attractions in the park include a small Hibiscus Garden, close to the orchids and a deer park which costs just 1 ringitt.

Note - the deer park and butterfly park close at 5 pm - i.e. an hour earlier than the orchids so you may need to see these before the orchids if you are going to be pressed for time. Because they close earlier, you’ll also find even fewer taxis in the area after 5 pm.

From journal Malaysian Memories

Editor Pick

Lake Gardens

  • April 30, 2025
  • Rated 4 of 5 by Koentje3000 from Hamme, Belgium

The Lake Gardens of Kuala Lumpur (Taman Tasik Perdana in Malaysian) are a huge and beautiful park, almost 100 ha in size. The gardens were constructed in 1880 as a colonial getaway around an artificial lake. Due to later extensions to the gardens, the lake is now located in the south west of the whole park. You can rent small rowing boats and pedal boats to get around the lake. The lake gardens itself consists of large lawns lined with big tropical trees, flower beds, ponds, fountains, grassy hills and jogging and hiking trails crisscrossing around the gardens. It is a very popular place for locals and tourists alike on fine days.

A few other natural attractions are within the garden boundaries. In the north are the excellent Hibiscus and Orchid gardens, a real treat for flower lovers. Due to Malaysia's tropical climate there are always a few blooming specimen available with magnificently coloured flowers. From the lake gardens you just follow the signs up the hill. Entrance to the flower gardens is free, and the flowers are beautiful. A shop selling the flowers, gifts, snacks and drinks is available within the grounds. Just to the west of the Orchid Garden, across Jalan Perdana, is the free Deer Park. In here, spotted deer roam around in the bushes. Due to the dense shrubbery at places it is not always easy to spot them. Look out for the so-called kancil, the small (40cm long) Malaysian or lesser mouse deer.

Also in the north of the gardens, to the east of the Orchid garden, is the butterfly park. The park is a recreation of a tropical rainforest, the natural setting for most of the 6000 butterflies. The butterflies are mostly nicely coloured rainforest species, but also a few brown or yellow coloured moths. Entrance to the butterfly park is RM2-4 (0.5-1 euro). More south, to the east of the lake, is the great bird park, featuring birds like ostriches and hawks in cages, but most notable for its free-flight aviary, apparently the biggest in the world with 3ha and species like the kingfisher, various types of hornbill and parrots. Entry to the bird park is again RM 2-4. Completely in the south of the Gardens, even beyond the National Mosque, is a planetarium, the National Museum and the Islamic Art Museum. The latter one must be one of the nicest one of its kind around the world.

The Lake gardens can easily be reached from Merdeka Square in the north, close to Masjid Jamek LRT station, or the huge blue-tiled National Mosque (difficult to miss!), close to the nice Old Railway Station, currently the LRT station named Kuala Lumpur (not to be mixed with KL Sentral).

From journal The Modern Capital of Malaysia

Editor Pick

The Lake Gardens & The Butterfly Garden

  • June 10, 2025
  • Rated 3 of 5 by phileasfogg from New Delhi, India

The Lake Gardens were right up there on all the `must see in KL’ lists we’d gleaned from books and websites, so one fine day, after having spent some time jostling through the busy bazaars of the city, we took a train to KL Sentral, from where we got a taxi to the Lake Gardens. The Lake Gardens (Taman Tasik Perdana) centre around an artificial lake, and spread out over an expanse of 229 acres. It’s a huge sprawling complex of trees (mainly jacaranda, palms, bamboo and eucalyptus), watercourses and ponds. Jogging trails lead through the area and every now and then there’s a pebble path, covered with smooth round pebbles over which you can walk, barefooted, to try some reflexology on yourself.

The Lake Gardens are popular with locals, and within the park itself are a few isolated gardens, each a sight in itself. It was our misfortune that the first one we entered- the Deer Garden- was so disappointing (very drab and with barely a deer in sight) that we turned back almost from the entrance itself. The second one, the Butterfly Garden (Taman Rama) was, however, much more satisfying. It had plenty of butterflies, including some large and exquisitely colourful ones, all of them fluttering about under a huge canopy of net, with trees, plants and flowers all about. Pathways meandered through the enclosed garden, and every now and then, along the way, was the occasional surprise- a little wooden table with bright scarlet hibiscus flowers, sprayed with a solution of honey, supposed to supplement the butterflies’ diet. And there were other diversions, not all of them connected with lepidoptera: small birdcages; ponds filled with koi (a Japanese carp), turtles and terrapins- all are part of the jumble. The exit leads through a huge and well-labelled collection of butterflies, moths, beetles, arachnids, grasshoppers and whatnot- some beautiful, some masters of the art of disguise, many downright creepy, but most very interesting.

Another of the gardens within the Lake Gardens is the Orchid Garden- we were very keen on seeing this, but fate decided to play a mean trick on us, and we couldn’t find it (yes, sounds crazy, but there’s a shortage of signboards around, and very few people were in the park- and those who were there didn’t understand English). Things turned out for the best, though – having lost our way, we ended up at what is easily the best of the Lake Gardens’ attractions, the splendid Islamic Arts Museum (there’s a separate journal entry for this; it’s definitely one of Kuala Lumpur’s top sights).

Entry to the Lake Gardens is free, but you’ll have to pay entry fees to visit the various sights within the gardens. Entry to the Islamic Art Museum, for instance is RM8, while entry to the Butterfly Garden is RM10.

From journal A Brief Visit to KL

Editor Pick

Lake Gardens

  • October 26, 2025
  • Rated 2 of 5 by ManFriday from Copenhagen, Denmark

Lake Gardens form a green band stretching across the south-western end of city centre. Landscaped hills surround the central lake of the Gardens, Tasik Penara, where - should you feel the sudden need for a low-andrenaline urban water activity - you can rent boats for a brief paddle.

Altough walking is obviously the preferred mode of locomotion in this area, a shuttle bus is thoughtfully provided to those weak of foot.

A few attractions speckle the large area; worth mentioning are the Orchid Gardens, where you can find a blessed shade from the noontime sun and saturate your senses with the explosion of colors. Just across lies the Bird Park, a large area, where a multitude of magnificent, tropical birds spend their time watching tourists with a smug expressions of superiority.

A Deer Park and Butterfly Park are also to be found in the immediate area, where a number of cute, colorful and/or furry animals are kept on display for your pleasure. No dangerous, disgusting or creepy beasts have hitherto been found worthy a park of their own, which might prove a slight disappointment for your 10-year old son. The zoological gardens might be able to help you there, tho.

The National Monument is placed on a hillside in the northern part of the Lake Gardens, commemorating the ass-whopping delivered to the Communists during the Emergency (for more info about these troubled times, consult your local guidebook). Worth a brief look, as it provides a great view of the Gardens and KL itself.

National Planetarium is one of the other sites worth visiting in the nearby area, offering science shows and IMAX movie performances.

From journal Muddy flats of Kuala Lumpur

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