Causeway Road
Native name | 高士威道 (Yue Chinese) |
---|---|
Location | Causeway Bay, Hong Kong |
Coordinates | 22°16′52″N 114°11′24″E / 22.2811°N 114.1899°E |
Causeway Road (Chinese: 高士威道; Cantonese Yale: gou1 si6 wai1 dou6) is a main road in Hong Kong. Situated in Causeway Bay, it joins Yee Wo Street in the west and King's Road. It is a boundary of Eastern District and Wan Chai District. North side of the road is Victoria Park in Eastern District while in the Wan Chai District in the south are Queen's College and Hong Kong Central Library.
History
[edit]The road was evolved from a causeway across Causeway Bay (Tung Lo Wan) in the 1880s.[1][2] Before the construction of the road, another road Tung Lo Wan Road was the only road connecting the two sides of the bay. In 1883, Hong Kong Government reclaimed the bay within the causeway and the causeway was renovated as Causeway along the sea shore. Its Cantonese name 高士威道 (ko sze wai dou) was after the English pronunciation of the road. Trams run to and from the embankment. In 1951, the north of road was reclaimed for Victoria Park.
When created, the road was the only way to get from the Eastern District to Central. Causeway Road's name comes from "way" meaning "road" in English as well as its being a primitive road made from stone.[3]
Features
[edit]- Causeway Bay Sports Ground (銅鑼灣運動場)
- Hong Kong Central Library
- Queen's College
- Victoria Park
- 3 stops of Hong Kong Tramways: Shelter Street Stop, Victoria Park Stop, Hing Fat Street Stop
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Cheng, Bou-hung 鄭寶鴻 (2015). 此時彼刻:港島東百年變遷 [This Moment: A Century of Hong Kong Roads and Streets] (in Chinese). Hong Kong: Zhonghua Book Company. p. 164. ISBN 978-9-88834-021-7. Retrieved 2023-05-29 – via Google Books.
- ^ "圖說香江:銅鑼灣高士威道,約1965年" [Illustrated Hong Kong: Causeway Road, Causeway Bay, circa 1965]. Wen Wei Po (in Chinese). 2008-01-03. Archived from the original on 2023-05-29. Retrieved 2023-05-29.
- ^ Ha, Lik 夏歷 (1995). 香港東區街道故事 [The Secret History of Hong Kong's Eastern District Streets] (in Chinese). Hong Kong: Joint Publishing. ISBN 978-9-62041-229-5. Retrieved 2023-05-29 – via Google Books.