This 400 million-year-old cave site and temple in Malaysia is planning an escalator upgrade

This 400 million-year-old cave site and temple in Malaysia is planning an escalator upgrade

(CNN) – The custodians of an ancient Hindu religious site in Malaysia are planning to install an escalator as an alternative for those visitors either unable or unwilling to climb the 272 steps leading to its temple and cave shrines.

The Batu Caves are one of Malaysia’s most popular tourist attractions. They serve as a religious site for Hindu worshippers and are the focal point of the annual Thaipusam festival every year.

To reach the temple housed in a limestone cave at the top, visitors must currently climb 272 steps.

Adding an escalator would make the site “more accessible,” a spokesperson for the site’s management committee told a press conference Friday.

“We hope the government will assist us since this (escalator) will allow the disabled and elderly who are unable to climb the steps to reach the main temple,” said temple committee chairman R. Nadarajah.

Construction of the escalator, as well as a new “multipurpose hall” will begin after this year’s Thaipusam festival which falls on January 25, Nadarajah added.

The hall is estimated to cost around 35 million Malaysian ($7.5 million), Nadarajah said. He did not say how much the escalator would cost.

BATU CAVES, MALAYSIA - SEPTEMBER 01: Visitors are seen take their picture on the 272-step stairs leading up to the Sri Subramaniar Swamy temple are painted with bright colors  on September 1, 2018 in Batu Caves, Malaysia. The Sri Subramaniar Swamy Temple are painted to resamble a rainbow and also given a colourfull new look for temple, a rejuvenations process which is performed once 12 years also is a part of Hindu ritual for their beleiver. (Photo by Mohd Samsul Mohd Said/Getty Images)

Tourists visiting Malaysia flock to the Batu Caves to see their famous rainbow stairs, which were painted as part of an effort by the temple’s organizing committee to attract more people to the site.

Batu Cave officials say the strategy has worked, pointing out the colorful stairs have become popular with Instagrammers.

However, the rejuvenation has also courted controversy with the Malaysian heritage board, which says the steps were painted before the makeover was approved.

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