The Johor State Mosque is presumably a standout amongst the most lovely mosques in Malaysia because of the dazzling 19th century English Victorian design that is mixed with Moorish and Malay impact. Finished when the new century rolled over in 1900 following eight years of development, the excellent mosque sits over a slope sitting above the Tebrau Straits and Singapore.
A conspicuous element here is the four thousand minarets that take after British watch towers because of the Victorian engineering while the a significant part of the materials used to construct the mosque was foreign made from Turkey, Czechoslovakia and Italy. The veneer of the structure demonstrates tall Victorian wooden windows estimating six feet in stature with excellent English carvings, while each passage holds magnificent entrances.