Queen's Road East | |||||||||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 皇后大道東 | ||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 皇后大道东 | ||||||||||||
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Queen's Road East is a street in Wan Chai, in the north of Hong Kong Island, Hong Kong, connecting Admiralty in the west to Happy Valley in the east. Queen's Road East is one of the four sections of Queen's Road, and historically included Queensway.
Location
Queen's Road East forks to the south from Queensway near Justice Drive, where Queensway turns into Hennessy Road. It runs along the old northern shoreline of Hong Kong Island.[1] It ends in the east at Wong Nai Chung Road in Happy Valley.[2]
History
The settlement of Wan Chai began in pre-British times as a small Chinese community around the present Hung Shing Temple on Queen's Road East.[3] The temple was probably built in 1847 and may have existed previously as a shrine.[4] Originally built next to the shoreline, facing the sea,[4] it is now surrounded by clusters of residential and commercial buildings, as the consequence of successive land reclamation.[5]
Queen's Road East was first developed into a European commercial and residential centre after the arrival of the British in 1841. It had become a mainly Chinese residential, labouring and shop-keeping community by the 1860s.[1]
The eastern part of the road was cut through Morrison Hill, which formerly separated Wanchai from Happy Valley. This section was known as 'Gap Road'. That name was still in use around 1930, even though the high land to the north of the 'gap' was levelled in the 1920s and the materials used to reclaim land from the harbour, under the Praya East Reclamation Scheme.[6]
Although associated with Queen's Road Central and Queen's Road West, the name 'Queen's Road East' has been in use since at least the 1870s.[7]
Features
The following list follows a west-east order. (N) indicates the northern side of the street, while (S) indicates the southern side.
- > intersection with Queensway and junction with Justice Drive (正義道)
- (N) Sincere Insurance Building (Chinese: 先施保險大廈) (Nos. 6–10). First building on the northern side of the street.
- (S) > junction with Monmouth Path
- (S) Three Pacific Place (No. 1)
- (N) Tesbury Centre (金鐘匯中心) (Nos. 24–32)
- (S) > junction with Wing Fung Street, part of the Starstreet Precinct shopping and dining area
- (N) > junction with Anton Street
- (S) > junction with Wing Lok Lane
- (N) > junction with Landale Street
- (N) > junction with Li Chit Street
- (S) > junction with St. Francis Street
- (N) > junction with Gresson Street
- (N) > junction with Lun Fat Street
- > intersection with Ship Street
- (N) > junction with Tai Wong Street West
- (S) Hung Shing Temple (Nos. 129–131). Grade I historic building.[8]
- (N) > junction with Tai Wong Street East
- (N) > junction with Swatow Street
- (N) > junction with Amoy Street
- (S) Hopewell Centre (No. 183)
- (N) Nos. 186–190 Queen's Road East. Tong-laus built in the 1930s.[1][9] Grade III historic buildings.[8]
- (N) > junction with Lee Tung Street
- (N) QRE Plaza (No. 202)
- (N) > junction with Spring Garden Lane
- (N) GARDENEast (No. 222), a 28-storeys serviced apartments building[10]
- (S) Wu Chung House (No. 213)
- (N) > junction with McGregor Street
- (S) Old Wan Chai Post Office (No. 221), a declared monument
- (S) > junction with Wan Chai Gap Road
- (N) > junction with Tai Yuen Street
- (N) Hotel Indigo Hong Kong Island (No. 246)
- (N) MLC Tower (No. 248)
- (S) Queen's Cube (No. 239), a 29-storeys apartment building. Completed in 2010.
- (S) > junction with Stone Nullah Lane
- (N) > junction with Wan Chai Road
- (N) Old Wan Chai Market (No. 264). Grade III historic building.[8]
- (S) > junction with Kennedy Street
- (N) Hong Kong Jockey Club Garden (香港賽馬會花園)
- (N) Ruttonjee Hospital (No. 266). Merged with Tang Shiu Kin Hospital in 1998. The Hong Kong Tuberculosis, Chest and Heart Disease Association building is a Grade III historic building.[8]
- (S) > junction with Kennedy Road
- (S) Wah Yan College (No. 281). Located on Mount Parish.
- (S) Portals No. 79, 80 and 81 of the former air raid precaution (ARP) tunnels, which were built under Mount Parish some time before the Battle of Hong Kong in 1941.
- (N) Wan Chai Park (灣仔公園)
- (N) > junction with Wood Road
- (S) > junction with Stubbs Road
- (S) Khalsa Diwan Sikh Temple (No. 371). Grade II historic building.[8]
- (N) Queen Elizabeth Stadium (opposite Cosmopolitan Hotel)
- (S) Dorsett Wanchai Hong Kong Hotel (formerly Cosmopolitan Hotel) (Nos. 387–397). Located at the eastern end of the street. The building was formerly the location of the Hong Kong Branch of the Xinhua News Agency.
- > intersection with Wong Nai Chung Road opposite the northwestern part of Happy Valley Racecourse, and junction with Morrison Hill Road
Intersecting streets and lanes
North side
Most streets and lanes having a northern junction with Queen's Road East connect with Johnston Road, located northward. The exceptions are Anton Street, McGregor Street and Wood Road. Since Queen's Road East runs mostly along the original shoreline of Hong Kong Island, these streets have been built on early land reclamation. The streets and lanes connecting with the north side of Queen's Road East are from west to east:
- Anton Street (晏頓街). Named after Charles Edward Anton. A short street connecting Queen's Road East to Queensway.
- Landale Street (蘭杜街)
- Li Chit Street (李節街). Part of the street was removed to give way to the Li Chit Garden apartment tower.
- Gresson Street. The Open Market in Gresson Street is part of the Wan Chai Heritage Trail.[11]
- Lun Fat Street (聯發街)
- Ship Street (also south side)
- Tai Wong Street West (大王西街). Connects with Queen's Road East across the street from Hung Shing Temple.[12] It derives its name from the temple, as "Tai Wong" is an alternate name for Hung Shing.[13]
- Tai Wong Street East (大王東街). Connects with Queen's Road East across the street from Hung Shing Temple.[12]
- Swatow Street. Named after Shantou.
- Amoy Street. Named after Xiamen.
- Lee Tung Street aka. Wedding Card Street
- Spring Garden Lane
- McGregor Street (麥加力歌街). Connects Queen's Road East with Cross Street.
- Tai Yuen Street (太原街) aka. "Toy Street", after the toy shops of the street. The Open Market in Tai Yuen Street and Cross Street is part of the Wan Chai Heritage Trail.[11]
- Wan Chai Road
- Wood Road is located further east, past Wan Chai Park, and connects Queen's Road East to Wan Chai Road
South side
The only street crossing with Queen's Road East, i.e. having both north and south junctions with the Road, is Ship Street. The streets and lanes connecting with the south side of Queen's Road East are from west to east:
- Monmouth Path (萬茂里)
- Wing Fung Street, part of the Starstreet Precinct shopping and dining area.
- Wing Lok Lane (永樂里), a short street connecting Queen's Road East to Sun Street
- St. Francis Street
- Ship Street (also north side)
- Wan Chai Gap Road (灣仔峽道)
- Stone Nullah Lane
- Kennedy Street (堅彌地街)
- Kennedy Road
- Stubbs Road
In popular culture
The 1991 song, also titled "Queen's Road East" (皇后大道東), by Taiwanese singer Lo Ta-yu and Hong Kong singer-composer Ram Chiang makes references to the handover of Hong Kong to China.
References
- ^ a b c Antiquities and Monuments Office: Brief Information on Proposed Grade 3 Items. Item #826 Archived 17 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Yanne, Andrew; Heller, Gillis (2009). Signs of a Colonial Era. Hong Kong University Press. p. 9. ISBN 9789622099449.
- ^ Wordie, Jason (2002). Streets: Exploring Hong Kong Island. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press. p. 102. ISBN 962-209-563-1.
- ^ a b Brief Information on Proposed Grade I Items, pp.207–208 Archived 13 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Welcome to 18 districts – Wan Chai District
- ^ Gwulo – c.1930 Funeral procession along Gap Road
- ^ Letter from J. Gardiner Austin, Colonial Secretary, Hongkong Government Gazette, 10 January 1874
- ^ a b c d e Antiquities and Monuments Office: List of the Historic Buildings in Building Assessment Archived 22 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine (as of 23 November 2011)
- ^ Urban Renewal Authority: 186–190 Queen's Road East
- ^ GARDENEast: About Us
- ^ a b Wan Chai Heritage Trail flyer. Archived 15 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b Chinese Temples Committee website Archived 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Introduction to 1444 Historic Buildings. Item #111 Archived 13 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine