What to do in Hong Kong at night
The Forbidden City in Hong Kong can feel the rise and fall of a dynasty among the pavilions and pavilions of the past. Want to know? Here are more Hong Kong entertainment group purchases >> Recommendations for fun places to have fun in Hong Kong at night:
1. Go to Causeway Bay at night. Causeway Bay is located to the west of the north shore of the center of Hong Kong Island. It is the main commercial and entertainment venue in Hong Kong. There are many large department stores and shopping malls in the area, including Sogo Department Store, Times Square, Lee Theater Plaza and the World Trade Center. The Causeway Bay shopping area is also the second most expensive location in the world to rent, second only to Fifth Avenue in New York, USA. Causeway Bay originally referred to the bay and its east coast that is now Victoria Park. The coastline here resembles a gong, hence the name. The former coastline is today's Causeway Bay Road. Causeway Bay was known as Yanchuan Bay in ancient times. In the 18th century, the Tai family built the "Yimchuan Bay Red Incense Burner Temple" on the east coast of the bay, which is today's Tin Hau Temple in Causeway Bay.
2. Go to Kowloon at night. The full name of Kowloon is the Kowloon Peninsula. It is one of the three major areas of Hong Kong. Kowloon is surrounded by Victoria Harbor on three sides: southeast, southeast and west. Kowloon, like Hong Kong Island across the sea, is an integral part of Hong Kong's prosperous urban area. Among them, Tsim Sha Tsui, Yau Ma Tei and Mong Kok (referred to as Yau Tsim Mong) are the most attractive. These areas have everything from shopping, dining, entertainment and culture, and are on par with Hong Kong Island! Famous commercial centers include Tsim Sha Tsui Center, Empire Center, Hershey Center, Nanyang Center, etc. Various shops are lined up in rows, making it a shopping paradise for tourists. Famous hotels include Peninsula Hotel, Regal Hotel, Seaview Holiday Inn, Shangri-La Hotel, etc. The east and west of Kowloon are densely populated industrial areas, the north is a residential area, and the south is a famous commercial area. The former Hong Kong Kai Tak Airport, one of the world's busiest airports, is in Kowloon and is now a tourist area. The origin of Hong Kong’s place name Hong Kong’s name is related to spices. During the Song and Yuan Dynasties, Hong Kong was administratively subordinate to Dongguan, Guangdong. Since the Ming Dynasty, a small harbor in the south of Hong Kong Island has been a distribution port for the transshipment of spices from southern Guangdong. It is famous for its transshipment of spices produced in Dongguan, Guangdong, and is known as "Hong Kong". It is said that the spices transshipped in Hong Kong at that time were of high quality and were called "Hainan treasures". Many local people in Hong Kong were also engaged in growing spices. Together with the spices grown in Hong Kong, Hong Kong became famous. Soon this spice was listed as a tribute to the emperor, and created a prosperous incense making and shipping industry at that time. Later, the cultivation and transshipment of spices gradually declined, but the name Hong Kong was retained.