Hong
Kong Museums
Sam
Tung UK Museum
2 Kwu UK Lane, New
Territories
Tseun Wan, New Territories
Wong Tai Sin Temple
+852 2320 2883
Probably the best
known and busiest temple in the city, Wong Tai Sin was built in 1973 on
the site of a previous temple dating back to 1921. The current temple
is an excellent example of a traditional Chinese temple. Wong Tai Sin
himself was a shepherd boy from Zhejiang province in China, who was thought
to have mystical healing powers. Most people visiting the temple come
to assess their fortune by using fortune sticks, and there are even some
English speaking ?seers? who can help visitors interpret the fortune sticks.
Admission: Free (donations welcome).
Po Lin Buddha
Lantau Island
Temple and Museum
open daily 10:30-5.
Monastery open daily
9-6
Ferry from Queen?s
Pier (45 minutes)
+852 2805 1234
Although this is
some distance from central Hong Kong (a ferry trip and a long, at times
frightening, bus ride), it is well worth the excursion. A taxi could be
considered for the journey. If the goal is to view the Buddha and the
monastery without climbing the 288 steps, it would be worthwhile to hire
a taxi and have the driver wait while the Buddha is viewed and photos
are taken. Envisioned by the community of monks on Lantau Island, it took
more than ten years to build. It is 112 feet tall, made entirely of metal
and consists of a steel framework covered by a steel and bronze skin,
as well as over one ton of gold amalgam. It weighs 250 tons. Note, however,
that there are 268 steps to get to the Buddha.
Ngong Ping
Tea Gardens
Located above Po
Lin Monastery on Lantau Island
This is Hong Kong?s
only tea plantation. It?s on top of a mountain with only one road up and
down. It offers horseback riding, barbecue pits and a roller-skating rink.
The ferry for Lantau Island leaves from the Outlying Islands Ferry Pier,
west of the Star Ferry terminal in Central. On the island, directions
to the Tea Gardens are available at the ferry pier.
Hong Kong
Zoological and Botanical Gardens
+852 2530 0154
Located near the
Old Government House, the Zoological and Botanical Gardens is a popular
place for parents to bring their children on the weekends. The gardens
are divided into two main areas: plants and aviaries in one area and animals
in the other. Although the zoo is not large, it is one of the world's
leading centers for careful breeding and nurturing of endangered species.
It is also a great place to take pictures of the family with the various
animals on display.
Lei Yue Mun
Park and Holiday Village
+852 2568 7455
The first holiday
village in an urban area, Lei Yue Mun Park offers both day and overnight
accommodation for campers. It provides a wide range of indoor and outdoor
activities, such as soccer, gate ball, basketball, tennis, archery, indoor
bowls, a swimming pool, climbing, and badminton, plus barbecue sites.
There is also a horse-riding school.
Kadoorie
Farm and Botanical Gardens
+852 2488 1317
Set at the foot of
Tai Mo Shan this farm consists of more than just a few fields and some
livestock. In the late 1940s, brothers Sir Horace and Lord Lawrence Kadoorie,
set up what was to become the current farm and botanical gardens. As well
as helping with local and international aid projects, the organization
is involved in pioneering organic farming and educating about the environment.
A multitude of displays and refreshment areas, as well as a beautiful
location, make this worth a visit for kids and adults alike.
Mai Po Marshes
Shenzen
+852 2471 8272
Open daily 9-6
Make a reservation
in advance as numbers are limited.
The marsh, on the
edge of Deep Bay, in the northwest of the New Territories covers about
3,706 acres of wetlands. A 939 acre nature reserve attracts as many as
300 species of migratory birds. The visitor center provides a tour and
maps explaining he ecology and history of the site.
Bird Market
Hong Lok St, Mongkok,
Kowloon
This street market
specializing in birds, singing crickets and intricate cages gives a glimpse
into the traditional Chinese way of life. Note: Visits to the Bird Market
are not recommended at this time due to the possible threat of Avian Flu.
Cheung Chau
Island
Cheung Chau
This little island
offers walks, temples and traditional fishing villages, as well as markets
and seafront, seafood restaurants.
Museum of
Art: Hong Kong Cultural Centre
10 Salisbury Rd,
Tsimshatsui, Kowloon
Art Museum featuring
Calligraphy, scrolls and colonial-era art, as well as an excellent, well-presented
collection of Chinese antiquities.
Wong Tai
Sin Temple: Taoist temple
Wong Tai Sin, Kowloon
Huge, colorful Taoist
temple dedicated to a god of healing. A constant throng of petitioners
and fortunetellers.
Space Museum
10 Salisbury Road,
Hong Kong
2734-2722
Open Mon, Wed-Fri
1-8 (longer on Fri.) and Sat,Sun 10-9.
This museum has one
of the largest and most advanced planetariums in the world. It has many
hands-on exhibits including the actual Mercury space capsule piloted by
Scott Carpenter in 1962. The Space Museum is the massive white dome in
Tsim Sha Tsui, a short walk from the Star Ferry. It's in three parts:
Planetarium, Exhibition Hall and Hall of Solar Sciences. Short films run
in the theater.
Government
House
Central, on Upper
Albert Road
The Government House
is the official residence of the governor of Hong Kong under British rule.
The tower was added during the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong in World
War II. The Chief Executive of the SAR (Special Administrative Region)
has elected not to live in the building.
Hong Kong
Museum of History
100 Chatham Road
South, Kowloon
Park, Tsim Sha Tsui,
2367-1124
Open Mon-Wed. 10-6;
Sunday 10-7
This museum set in
a park includes a replica of a sampan, the interior of a Hakka home, and
a full scale replica of a street in the City of Victoria (as Central was
once called). The exhibits bring history to life. Also an excellent collection
of local photographs from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Botanical
Gardens
Albany Road, Hong
Kong
2530-0154.
The Botanic Gardens
are also above Central, but to the west. Lively monkeys and
orangutans enjoy
watching their visitors.
Middle
Kingdom
2555-3554
Middle Kingdom offers
replicas of temples, pagodas and street scenes, as well as exhibits and
demonstration stalls. Get your name written in Chinese characters and
see the Lion Dance in front of you!
St. John's
Cathedral
On Garden Road, Central,
Hong Kong
St. John's Cathedral
is a handsome building, the oldest Anglican church in East Asia. It was
constructed in1849.
Tsui Museum
of Art
2A Des Voeux Rd.,
Central, Hong Kong
2868-2688.
Rotating exhibitions
drawn from its collection of more than 3,000 Chinese antiquities, predominantly
Chinese ceramics.
Water World
Ocean Park Road,
Aberdeen, Hong Kong
2555-6055
Contains water slides
(you plunge down at 28 mph/45 kph), a wave pool, the Lazy River and a
children?s area for those under age 6.
Hong Kong
Science Museum
2 Science Museum
Rd
Tsim Sha Tsui East,
Kowloon
2732-3232.
Hands-on exhibits
that will interest adults as well as children.
Temple of
10,000 Buddhas
Close to Tai Pau
Street, New Territories
Above Shatin railway
station (go by Kowloon Canton Railway). 30 minutes outside Hong Kong
Open daily 8-6
To reach the Temple
there is a climb of 431 steps. Known locally as ?Man Fat Sze Temple?,
this Buddhist shrine was built in the 1950s. Grateful worshippers have
donated thousands of small statues over the years. Each shows the Buddha
in a different pose. From the edge of the courtyard there are magnificent
views over Sha Tin. The courtyard contains a beautiful tiered pagoda.
Higher up is a set of four temples. One contains Hong Kong?s second tallest
Buddha statue; another the embalmed remains of Yuet Kai who founded the
monastery.
University
Museum and Art Gallery
University of Hong
Kong, 94 Bonham Road Hong Kong Island
+852 2859-2114.
Open Mon-Sat 9:30-6;
Sunday 1:30-5:30. Closed on public holidays.
Large collection
of bronze ware from the Yuan Dynasty as well as artifacts from the Warring
States Period and Indian Buddhist sculpture. The museum houses an enormous
collection of ceramics dating back as far as Neolithic times.
Kat Hing
Wai
Kam Tin
Kat Hing Wai also
known as Kam Tin Walled Village is the original 10th-century homestead
of the Tang clan, the first of the Cantonese "Five Great Clans"
to migrate to the New Territories from China. The village may be modern
inside, but it's still surrounded by a moat and walls with four corner
guardhouse towers. Contributions to the donations box are expected, as
are handouts to the costumed Hake women before camera shutters can be
pressed.
Lei Cheng
UK Branch Museum
41 Tonkin St., Sham
Shui Po, Kowloon
2386-2863
Lei Cheng UK Branch Museum
is the Han Dynasty tomb dating back some 2,000 years, the oldest historical
monument in Hong Kong. Also a Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 220) exhibition of
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