Does anyone know of an example of a topological space which is not compactly generated? I am using the definition in May's book "A Concise Course in Algebraic Topology." The definition is that a space $X$ is compactly generated if for any continuous map $g:K\to X$ from a compact Hausdorff space $K$, we have $g(K)$ is closed in $X$ (i.e. $X$ is "weak Hausdorff") and for any subset $A$ of $X$, $A$ is closed if an only if for any map $g:K\to X$, the preimage $g^{-1}(A)$ is closed in $K$ (i.e. $X$ is a "$k$-space").
Of course, any compactly generated space is at least $T_1$, as compact Hausdorff spaces are $T_1$, so I am really interested in an example which has $T_1$-separation (or even better, one which is Hausdorff) but which fails to be a $k$-space.
An example I learnt from Engelking's book:
let $X = \mathbb{R} \setminus \{1,\frac{1}{2},\frac{1}{3},\ldots\}$ in the subspace topology and let $Y = \mathbb{R}$ where we identify the positive integers $\mathbb{N}$ to a point, in the quotient topology. Then $X \times Y$ is not a $k$-space (or compactly generated).
See this blogpost or Engelking's chapter on $k$-spaces for the argument. As this space is even Tychonoff, compactly generated and $k$-space etc. all coincide.