North Point
Encyclopedia : N : NO : NOR : North Point
North Point (}; Cantonese Yale: bak1 gok3; Cantonese IPA: pɐk1 kɔk3; Min Nan: Pak-kak) is an area of Hong Kong, located in the northern part of Hong Kong Island. Administratively, it belongs to Eastern District.
Demographics
North Point is famous for its concentration Shanghainese and Fujianese-speaking population, and is called Little Shanghai and Little Fujian of Hong Kong. Second to Cantonese, Min Nan is the most widely spoken language here.When the Guinness Book of Records was first published in the 1950s, North Point was listed as the most densely populated place on earth.
Places in North Point
A pedestrian crossing on King's Road and Tin Chong Street junction, North Point, Hong Kong
- Choi Sai Woo Park (on Braemar Hill)
- The main buildings of the Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club were located there, at 12 Oil Street, until 1946, when they were moved to their present location on Kellett Island, in Causeway Bay.
- King's Road
- Java Road
- Fortress Hill Road
- Tin Hau Temple Road
- Cloud View Road
- Fort Street
Transport
- North Point is served by the Island Line and the Tseung Kwan O Line of the MTR metro system. The MTR Station of the same name is the terminus of Tseung Kwan O Line.
- There are two highways serving North Point: Island Eastern Corridor and Eastern Harbour Crossing.
- North Point is served by Hong Kong Tramways, of which it is one of the seven terminal points.
- It is also served by the New World First Bus Services Limited and Citybus Company. The two companies also provide cross-harbor bus services jointly with the Kowloon Motor Bus Company.
- Ferries connect North Point ferry pier to various places in Hong Kong, including Hung Hom, Kowloon City, Kwun Tong and Po Toi Islands.
- It is also served by Public Light Buses.
See also
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
