Aina-Liyana: Walking along Farquhar Street.
Aina-Liyana: Paintjob needed.
Aina-Liyana: Lim Lean Teng was a Penang tycoon in the early half of the last century.
Aina-Liyana: Storage and service for Daimler-Chrysler cars.
Aina-Liyana: Thursday afternoon traffic.
Aina-Liyana: Farquhar Mansion is now a...?
Aina-Liyana: Branded door.
Aina-Liyana: Farquhar Bar, named after a former Lieutenant-Governor of Penang, Robert Townsend Farquhar.
Aina-Liyana: Eastern & Oriental Hotel was established by the Sarkies Brothers of Armenian descent.
Aina-Liyana: Tourists freshly docked off a tour bus.
Aina-Liyana: Sarkies Corner has bad acoustics due to its open-plan layout.
Aina-Liyana: Along the waterfront at Eastern & Oriental Hotel.
Aina-Liyana: Poor security. Outsiders have direct access to rooms.
Aina-Liyana: Looks nice on the outside. Inside, it's occupied by cheap-looking nightclubs.
Aina-Liyana: Hotel Malaysia's midcentury façade.
Aina-Liyana: Dated logo.
Aina-Liyana: For decorative purpose.
Aina-Liyana: Female hygiene products stuck on a lamppost near a cemetery.
Aina-Liyana: Christopher Henry Lloyd was murdered by a gang of Chinese robbers.
Aina-Liyana: A quite clean and neat cemetery.
Aina-Liyana: Visit the Protestant Cemetery.
Aina-Liyana: Masjid Kapitan Keling was one of the first Malaysian buildings to be featured on Google Maps Street View.
Aina-Liyana: Pretty bricks and vents detailing.
Aina-Liyana: Syed Al-Attas mansion badly needs restoration.
Aina-Liyana: Good for a period drama shoot.
Aina-Liyana: That stall looks like the famous charcoal stove Char Koay Teow stall.
Aina-Liyana: Lumut Lane, the birthplace of modern Malay literature?
Aina-Liyana: Suffolk House undergoing a minor renovation.
Aina-Liyana: Tea timer's delight.
Aina-Liyana: Left to their own devices.