This document is a comparative analysis essay analyzing the public spaces of Jalan Tuanku Abdul Rahman in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and Sejong Daero in Seoul, South Korea. It examines the scale, movement patterns of pedestrians, types of contact points, and degree of contact intensity in both locations based on the theories of Jahn Gehl. While Jalan TAR features dense shophouses and narrow alleys that encourage social gatherings, Sejong Daero has a larger scale with highways that scatter pedestrian movement. Both locations provide different social experiences for pedestrians due to varying qualities of their public spaces.