TY - CHAP AB - This chapter considers the ways in which city images “travel” and are consumed at a distance. A significant body of existing research has examined UMPs in terms of attempts to produce particular images of cities for global circulation. Much less attention has been paid to assessing the “success” of imaging strategies – the means by (and extent to) which city images actually circulate and are consumed. Focusing on the travel of UMPs constructed in and around the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur (KL) in the 1990s, the chapter seeks to provide a corrective to the production-centeredness of existing scholarship. Extending fieldwork-based research carried out in Malaysia in the 1990s, the chapter focuses on a series of accidental “encounters” with KL's UMPs outside Malaysia. Part of the aim of the chapter is precisely to begin to think about how the “consumption” side of UMPs, and associated effects, could be examined in more systematic ways in the future. Extra-Malaysian encounters with KL-sited UMPs such as the Kuala Lumpur City Center (KLCC) project are examined in terms of a range of means through which city images circulate: in film and TV performances, as tourist souvenirs and planning models, in building height charts and commercial advertising, and even through academic practices. Most instances in which UMPs are “consumed” at a distance might be banal and seemingly unworthy of study but, collectively, they can serve to forge new imaginings which, in turn, can have profound material implications for the cities concerned. VL - 13 SN - 978-1-78190-593-7, 978-1-78190-594-4/1047-0042 DO - 10.1108/S1047-0042(2013)0000013008 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/S1047-0042(2013)0000013008 AU - Bunnell Tim ED - Gerardo del Cerro Santamaría PY - 2013 Y1 - 2013/01/01 TI - Chapter 3 Encountering Kuala Lumpur through the “Travel” of UMPs T2 - Urban Megaprojects: A Worldwide View T3 - Research in Urban Sociology PB - Emerald Group Publishing Limited SP - 61 EP - 79 Y2 - 2024/04/19 ER -