[{"content":" “Kuala Lumpur does not simply need more parks.”\nIt needs a different way of thinking about green space.\nA park is usually treated as a destination: a bounded place to visit, exercise, rest, or take photographs. Green infrastructure is more demanding. It asks whether parks, street trees, rivers, drains, wetlands, green roofs, pocket gardens, school compounds, road verges, and leftover urban spaces work together as one urban system.\nCore argument. Kuala Lumpur’s challenge is not only a shortage of green space. The harder problem is converting fragmented green assets into a governed, measurable, and maintained infrastructure network. That distinction matters because Kuala Lumpur already has green ambitions. The Kuala Lumpur Structure Plan 2040 includes targets for a 20 m²-per-person open-space ratio, 100% retention of existing forest and recreation areas, one million trees, 200 km of garden connectors, and 50% canopy coverage by 2040 (Kuala Lumpur City Hall, n.d.). These are not small commitments. But the deeper question is whether those targets will become a connected climate-resilience system or remain a collection of disconnected greening projects.\nThe missing word is retrofit.\nCover image. Taman KLCC pedestrian and jogging route, Kuala Lumpur. Photograph by Wiki Farazi, Wikimedia Commons, CC0 1.0.\nPolicy target 50% canopy coverage KLSP2040 sets a canopy target alongside open-space, forest-retention, tree-planting, and connector goals. Heat signal 0.56% → 13.6% Greater KL high-heat zones above 30°C expanded substantially between 1990 and 2023. Governance gap Targets ≠ delivery Policy fragmentation, weak enforcement, and absent retrofit frameworks limit implementation. What green infrastructure retrofitting means Green infrastructure is not only ornamental planting. The European Commission defines it as a strategically planned network of natural and semi-natural areas designed and managed to deliver ecosystem services, including water purification, air-quality improvement, recreation, climate mitigation, and climate adaptation (European Commission, n.d.). In urban terms, vegetation, soil, water, shade, ecological corridors, and public open space should be planned as infrastructure rather than decoration.\nIn a new township, some of this can be planned from the beginning. In an already-dense city like Kuala Lumpur, the task is harder. Retrofitting means adding ecological function back into an urban fabric that is already built.\nThat can include:\ncontinuous street-tree corridors; rain gardens and bioswales; permeable pavements; shaded pedestrian and cycling routes; green roofs and podium landscapes; river and drainage-corridor restoration; pocket parks on leftover urban land; detention landscapes that hold stormwater during intense rain; native planting that connects habitat patches; and planning rules that treat greenery as infrastructure rather than decoration. The key word is network. A scattered collection of green spaces is not the same thing as a connected landscape system.\nThe problem: Kuala Lumpur’s green spaces are fragmented A 2019 study on fragmented green spaces in Kuala Lumpur used high-resolution SPOT-6 satellite imagery from 2016 to identify green-space distribution across the city. The study found about 84 km² of green space within Kuala Lumpur’s 243 km² total area, but also showed strong spatial imbalance: Damansara-Penchala had the highest total green-space area, while the Kuala Lumpur City Centre zone recorded only about 5 km². The authors concluded that urban green spaces were more fragmented where built-up areas were more dominant (Rasli et al., 2019).\nThis matters because fragmentation changes what green space can do. A large park can cool, absorb water, support wildlife, and provide recreation, but if it is isolated, many of its benefits stay local. A city needs patches, corridors, edges, links, and stepping-stones. Without that connective tissue, greenery becomes a set of islands.\nA later policy review of green infrastructure establishment in Kuala Lumpur reached a similar concern from the governance side. Yeo et al. (2023) reviewed 77 policy and regulatory documents and found that policy attention was weighted toward green infrastructure patches, followed by corridors and then components. That finding is important because a patch-based approach can still leave a city without a coherent network.\nThe problem is not simply that Kuala Lumpur needs more green area. It needs green area in the right places, connected through the right routes, designed for the right climate functions, and protected by rules that survive beyond individual projects.\nThe policy issue: targets do not implement themselves Recent planning research has been direct about this. Nizarudin and Zakariya (2025) argue that Kuala Lumpur’s green infrastructure problem is not only physical but also institutional. Their Planning Malaysia article identifies policy fragmentation, decentralised governance, inadequate financial incentives, weak enforcement mechanisms, and the absence of explicit regulatory frameworks for green infrastructure retrofitting as key barriers.\nFigure 1. Policy gaps should be converted into enforceable retrofit mechanisms, not treated as isolated greening problems.\nNote. Diagram by Gatto Land, based on Nizarudin and Zakariya (2025).\nThe diagram summarises the central issue: Kuala Lumpur does not only need more green space. It needs a delivery framework that maps existing conditions, requires site-level green infrastructure performance, funds maintenance, coordinates agencies, and monitors outcomes.\nThis is the core gap. A target says what the city wants. A retrofit framework says how the existing city will be repaired, who is responsible, what design standards apply, where the money comes from, and how success is measured.\nHeat makes the issue harder to ignore Urban heat turns green infrastructure from an aesthetic issue into a public-health and infrastructure issue.\nThe Habitat Foundation’s Greater Kuala Lumpur heat map study, conducted with Think City, used NASA Landsat data to assess land surface temperature between 1990 and 2023. Across the study area, maximum land surface temperatures rose by as much as 2.9°C. High-heat zones above 30°C expanded from 0.56% of the study area in 1990 to 13.6% in 2023, while naturally cooler areas below 25°C declined from roughly 33.9% to 25.9% (The Habitat Foundation, 2026).\nThose numbers make the landscape problem visible. Heat is not evenly distributed. It follows land use, surface materials, vegetation loss, road networks, exposed open spaces, and the disappearance of cooling landscape patches.\nThe same study argues that forests, green corridors, and natural hills remain some of Greater KL’s most reliable cooling infrastructure, while also noting that current planning frameworks do not yet sufficiently prioritise green-built ratios or explicitly integrate heat metrics into land-use and development-control decisions (The Habitat Foundation, 2026). That is exactly where retrofitting becomes relevant.\nA large park can cool its own surroundings, but it cannot shade every pedestrian route. A forest reserve can moderate temperature at a metropolitan scale, but it cannot by itself fix overheated streets, car parks, school compounds, or transit stops. Heat exposure is distributed across daily life, so the response must also be distributed.\nSource note. For mapped temperature evidence, link readers to The Habitat Foundation and Think City’s original heat-map study rather than copying the heat-map graphics unless reproduction permission is obtained. Water is part of the same landscape question Green infrastructure is often discussed through the language of trees and parks, but its water function is just as important.\nKuala Lumpur is a dense tropical city with heavy rainfall, hard surfaces, channelised drains, and intense development pressure. In that context, stormwater should not only be moved away as quickly as possible. It should also be slowed, filtered, absorbed, reused, and given space.\nFigure 2. Kuala Lumpur’s river corridors show why green infrastructure should be understood as blue-green infrastructure: water, public space, planting, access, flood management, and urban identity are spatially linked.\nNote. Photograph by Renek78, Wikimedia Commons, CC0 1.0.\nThe U.S. Environmental Protection Agency lists multiple green infrastructure practices relevant to stormwater management, including rain gardens, planter boxes, bioswales, permeable pavements, green roofs, downspout disconnection, constructed wetlands, rainwater harvesting, green streets, green parking, urban trees, and land conservation (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, n.d.). These systems use soil, plants, infiltration, retention, detention, evaporation, and evapotranspiration to manage stormwater closer to where it falls.\nFigure 3. Rain gardens are small retrofit landscapes that slow, retain, and filter runoff close to where rainfall lands. Note. Photograph by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency / Clarion Associates, public domain. Figure 4. Green roofs add stormwater storage, evapotranspiration, and heat-reduction functions where ground-level open space is constrained. Note. Photograph by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency / Nancy Arazon, public domain. For Kuala Lumpur, these examples are highly relevant. Many retrofit opportunities are not glamorous. They are in road verges, car parks, medians, school compounds, public housing landscapes, transit stations, drainage reserves, river edges, and leftover spaces under elevated infrastructure.\nA good retrofit strategy does not replace grey infrastructure. It combines grey, green, and blue systems so the city gains multiple benefits from the same land.\nPenang’s Nature-Based Climate Adaptation Programme offers a useful Malaysian reference point. The Adaptation Fund describes its blue-green corridor as using waterways, plants, and infrastructure to manage stormwater, cut heat, and enhance resilience; it also highlights pocket parks, green facades, and rooftops as part of the wider adaptation approach (Adaptation Fund, 2025). Kuala Lumpur should not copy Penang mechanically, but the logic is transferable: heat, water, biodiversity, and public space should be designed together.\nFrom targets to delivery KLSP2040’s targets are useful because they show that the policy direction is not blank. The city is already talking about canopy, open space, forest retention, tree planting, and garden connectors (Kuala Lumpur City Hall, n.d.).\nThe risk is that targets become isolated indicators. One million trees is valuable only if the trees survive, receive adequate soil volume, are planted where shade is needed, and contribute to a broader canopy network. Garden connectors are valuable only if they are continuous, safe, biodiverse, shaded, and integrated with walking, cycling, drainage, and river systems. Canopy coverage is valuable only if it reduces heat exposure in the places where people actually move and wait.\nThe target is not just green quantity. The target is urban performance.\nNatural England’s Green Infrastructure Framework is useful here because it treats green infrastructure as a standards-based planning issue. Its standards define what good green infrastructure should look like for local planners, developers, parks and greenspace managers, and communities, and how to plan it strategically to deliver multiple benefits for people and nature (Natural England, n.d.). Kuala Lumpur does not need to copy England’s standards directly, but it can adapt the principle: green infrastructure should be measurable, enforceable, and spatially targeted.\nSingapore’s Green Plan 2030 gives another nearby reference. Its City in Nature strategy emphasises restoring nature into the urban landscape and strengthening connectivity between green spaces (Singapore Green Plan 2030, 2026). Kuala Lumpur’s governance structure, density pattern, and metropolitan form are different, but the connectivity principle is relevant.\nA practical retrofit hierarchy for Kuala Lumpur For Kuala Lumpur, a practical green infrastructure retrofit hierarchy could look like this:\nPriority Strategy Why it matters 1 Protect existing forests, hills, mature trees, and large parks These are difficult or impossible to replace once lost. 2 Connect green patches through corridors Connectivity improves cooling, biodiversity, stormwater management, and access. 3 Retrofit streets and transit routes with shade Daily heat exposure often happens outside parks. 4 Convert suitable grey drainage assets into blue-green systems Stormwater assets can also provide cooling, filtration, and habitat. 5 Add pocket parks and small neighbourhood spaces Small sites matter when distributed across dense districts. 6 Use rooftops, podiums, facades, and leftover land Vertical and small-scale greening helps where ground-level land is constrained. 7 Monitor heat, runoff, access, connectivity, and maintenance Performance data prevents green infrastructure from becoming token landscaping. This hierarchy matters because it prevents the city from focusing only on visible, ribbon-cutting projects. The most valuable retrofit may be less glamorous: a shaded school route, a redesigned road verge, a vegetated swale beside a car park, a restored drainage reserve, or a protected cluster of mature trees.\nWhat the retrofit framework should measure A credible retrofit framework needs metrics. Counting trees is not enough.\nRetrofit objective Possible metric Reduce heat exposure Land surface temperature, shade coverage, canopy cover, thermal comfort along walking routes Improve stormwater management Runoff volume reduction, infiltration area, detention capacity, number of blue-green drainage assets Improve access Percentage of residents within a short walk of usable green or blue space Improve connectivity Continuity of tree canopy, river corridors, habitat patches, and ecological stepping-stones Improve public health Heat-exposure reduction near schools, clinics, transit stops, and public housing Improve governance Maintenance budgets, responsible agencies, enforcement mechanisms, and retrofit requirements in planning approvals The governance indicators matter as much as the environmental indicators. A bioswale can fail if no agency maintains it. A tree corridor can fail if underground utilities leave no soil volume. A garden connector can fail if it ends at an unsafe crossing. A rooftop landscape can fail if it is treated as a one-time compliance item rather than a maintained asset.\nGreen infrastructure is a living system, so implementation cannot stop at construction.\nConclusion: retrofit the city we already have Kuala Lumpur’s future green infrastructure will not be built only in new parks. It will be built inside the city that already exists.\nThat means working with streets, rivers, rooftops, drains, slopes, vacant lots, public housing landscapes, transit corridors, institutional compounds, and development-control rules. It means treating vegetation, soil, water, and shade as urban systems. It means asking not only “how much green space do we have?” but also “where is it, who can reach it, what does it connect, and what climate work does it perform?”\nMore parks would be welcome. But Kuala Lumpur’s deeper need is a connected green infrastructure retrofit strategy: one that reduces heat, manages water, supports biodiversity, improves public health, and gives existing urban space a second ecological function.\nThe city does not need greenery as decoration. It needs landscape as infrastructure.\nReferences Adaptation Fund. (2025, June 16). Penang’s urban green revolution: How nature is leading climate adaptation in Malaysia. https://www.adaptation-fund.org/penangs-urban-green-revolution-how-nature-is-leading-climate-adaptation-in-malaysia/\nEuropean Commission. (n.d.). Green infrastructure. Retrieved May 28, 2026, from https://environment.ec.europa.eu/topics/nature-and-biodiversity/green-infrastructure_en\nJumari, N. A. S. K., Ahmed, A. N., Huang, Y. F., Ng, J. L., Koo, C. H., Chong, K. L., Sherif, M., \u0026amp; Elshafie, A. (2023). Analysis of urban heat islands with Landsat satellite images and GIS in Kuala Lumpur Metropolitan City. Heliyon, 9(8), Article e18424. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e18424\nKuala Lumpur City Hall. (n.d.). Pelan Struktur Kuala Lumpur 2040. Retrieved May 28, 2026, from https://ppkl.dbkl.gov.my/en/pskl2040/\nNatural England. (n.d.). Green Infrastructure Framework standards. Retrieved May 28, 2026, from https://designatedsites.naturalengland.org.uk/GreenInfrastructure/GIStandards.aspx\nNizarudin, N. D., \u0026amp; Zakariya, K. (2025). Retrofitting green infrastructure in Kuala Lumpur: A document analysis of policy gaps and climate resilience. Planning Malaysia, 23(35). https://doi.org/10.21837/pm.v23i35.1697\nRamakreshnan, L., \u0026amp; Aghamohammadi, N. (2024). The application of nature-based solutions for urban heat island mitigation in Asia: Progress, challenges, and recommendations. Current Environmental Health Reports, 11(1), 4–17. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40572-023-00427-2\nRasli, F. N., Kanniah, K. D., \u0026amp; Ho, C. S. (2019). Analysis of fragmented green spaces in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Chemical Engineering Transactions, 72, 457–462. https://doi.org/10.3303/CET1972077\nSingapore Green Plan 2030. (2026, April 27). City in Nature. https://www.greenplan.gov.sg/key-focus-areas/city-in-nature/\nThe Habitat Foundation. (2026). Heat Map Study of Greater Kuala Lumpur. https://www.habitatfoundation.org.my/heat-map-study-of-greater-kuala-lumpur/\nU.S. Environmental Protection Agency. (n.d.). Types of green infrastructure. Retrieved May 28, 2026, from https://www.epa.gov/green-infrastructure/types-green-infrastructure\nYeo, O. T. S., Yusof, M. J. M., Maruthaveeran, S., Saito, K., \u0026amp; Kasim, J. A. (2023). A review of policies and regulations of green infrastructure establishment in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Pertanika Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities, 31(2), 561–584. https://doi.org/10.47836/pjssh.31.2.06\nImage credits and licences Wiki Farazi. (2026). Taman KLCC, Kuala Lumpur 20260428 103227.jpg [Photograph]. Wikimedia Commons. Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Taman_KLCC,_Kuala_Lumpur_20260428_103227.jpg\nGatto Land. (2026). Policy gap to green infrastructure retrofit framework [Diagram]. Created for this post, based on Nizarudin and Zakariya (2025).\nRenek78. (2023). River of Life, Kuala Lumpur in 2023 01.jpg [Photograph]. Wikimedia Commons. Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:River_of_Life,_Kuala_Lumpur_in_2023_01.jpg\nU.S. Environmental Protection Agency. (2006). Rain Garden (14418205110).jpg [Photograph]. Wikimedia Commons. Public domain. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Rain_Garden_(14418205110).jpg\nU.S. Environmental Protection Agency. (2014). Green Roof (15456078087).jpg [Photograph]. Wikimedia Commons. Public domain. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Green_Roof_(15456078087).jpg\n","date":"2026-05-28T09:00:00+08:00","image":"/p/kuala-lumpur-green-infrastructure-retrofitting/taman-klcc-kuala-lumpur-20260428-103227.jpg","permalink":"/p/kuala-lumpur-green-infrastructure-retrofitting/","title":"Why Kuala Lumpur Needs Green Infrastructure Retrofitting, Not Just More Parks"},{"content":" “Third time’s the charm.”\nAfter GitHub Pages and a turbulent WordPress era, this blog is finally static-and-secure on Hugo + Cloudflare Pages.\nQuick Timeline Year Platform Key Takeaway 2017 GitHub Pages (Jekyll) Great for learning Git workflows, but I soon craved richer features and better-looking themes. 2020 WordPress Visual editor was handy—until the security flood-gates opened. 2025 Hugo + Cloudflare Back to static HTML served from the edge; goodbye sleepless patch nights. Why I Abandoned WordPress 7,966 new vulnerabilities were disclosed in the WordPress ecosystem in 2024 alone—a 34 % jump over 2023, about 22 per day (Patchstack, 2025). Sucuri’s incident dataset shows 96.2 % of hacked CMS sites in 2022 ran WordPress (Sucuri, 2023). My site joined that statistic: an outdated plugin let a botnet deface the front page and lock me out. With no recent backups, the database was toast.\nLessons Learned Auto-renew everything – I even let my Japanese-romaji domain jiyuuneko.com lapse. A squatter grabbed it within hours. Version control = backup – Static files in Git are harder to lose than a live database. Least-moving-parts wins – No PHP, no MySQL, no attack surface. Why I’m Loving Hugo + Cloudflare Pages Blink-and-you-miss-it builds – Hugo cranks out the whole site faster than I can take a sip of coffee; thousands of pages appear in a heartbeat. Served from everywhere – Cloudflare tucks a copy of each page on its global edge, so readers in Wellington, Kuala Lumpur or Kansas get the same near-instant load. No moving parts, no drama – Static HTML means no database, no PHP, nothing for bad actors to poke. Perks included – Free HTTPS and a solid firewall, both flipped on with a couple of clicks. Pure Markdown happiness – I type in plain text, commit to Git, and Hugo does the rest. Diffs stay readable and my words aren’t locked inside any platform. What to Expect Here Deep-dive notes on landscape research, urban resilience, sustainable infrastructure, and digital publishing workflows. Preview URLs for every pull-request thanks to Cloudflare. If you bookmarked the old WordPress site—thanks for tracking me down again. The new URL is https://gatto.land, and yes, auto-renew is ON ✨.\nSee you in the next post!\nReferences Cloudflare. (2016, September 27). Cloudflare logo [SVG logo]. Wikimedia Commons. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cloudflare_Logo.svg\nCoelho, E., \u0026amp; YellowIcon. (2008, May 2). Stachledraht DDoS attack diagram [SVG image]. Wikimedia Commons. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Stachledraht_DDos_Attack.svg\nFrancia, S., \u0026amp; Parr, B. (2014, May 28). Logo of Hugo the static website generator [SVG logo]. Wikimedia Commons. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Logo_of_Hugo_the_static_website_generator.svg\nPatchstack. (2025). State of WordPress Security in 2025. https://patchstack.com/whitepaper/state-of-wordpress-security-in-2025/\nSucuri. (2023). 2022 Hacked Website Report. https://sucuri.net/reports/2022-hacked-website-report/\nWhelan, D. (2016, May 24). Cliche hacker and binary code [Photograph]. Flickr. https://www.flickr.com/photos/davidpwhelan/26946304530/\n","date":"2025-05-15T00:00:00Z","image":"/p/hello-world/Logo_of_Hugo.png","permalink":"/p/hello-world/","title":"Hello World! – A Fresh Start with Hugo + Cloudflare"}]