Causeway Bay
Causeway Bay: Interactive Map
Causeway Bay: Hotel List and Photos
Click here for Excelsior Hotel info and photos Click here for South Pacific Hotel info and photos Click for a Victoria Park photo Click for a Causeway Bay Typhoon Shelter photo Click here for a Sino Plaza building photo Click here for Sogo department store photo Click here for a Happy Valley Race Track photo Click here for a Wanchai Map and Area Description Click here for a North Point Map and Area Description Click here for a Times Square photo Click here for a Happy Valley Race Track photo Click here for a Times Square photo Click here for an MTR Route Map Click here for an aerial photo of Causeway Bay
 Map of Causeway Bay, Hong Kong Island, Hong Kong (S.A.R.), China
Hong Kong Hotels: Causeway Bay

Hotel Name
(click for information)
Excelsior Hong Kong
South Pacific Hong Kong

Photographs
Listed below is the complete list of photographs you can click to from this page. Some links are found in the map to your left, and others are located in the text of the Area Description (below) but all are listed here.

Causeway Bay (Aerial)
Happy Valley (aerial shot)
Happy Valley (racing)
Sino Plaza

Sogo Department Store

Times Square (to Happy V.)
Times Square (from Happy V.)
Times Square Plaza
Typhoon Shelter
Victoria Park/Shelter
Causeway Bay: Area Description

Introduction
Causeway Bay was one of the first areas in Hong Kong to have high-rises with buildings such as the World Trade Centre and the Excelsior Hotel being constructed in the 1970's and early 1980's. Now, shopping is the main thing here with commercial shopping rents in the area being the second-highest in the world at 5,000 USD per square meter. (Madison Avenue is first at apx. 6,000 USD.)

On the north of the area lies the Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club and the Causeway Bay typhoon shelter. Plunging beneath the harbor between them is Hong Kong Island's entrance to the Cross-Harbour Tunnel, now one of four tunnels between the Island and Kowloon with the recent addition of the Western Harbour Tunnel. At the center of the area, shopping abounds in Little Japan (near the MTR station), Jardine's Bazaar, and Times Square. At the far southern end, before the island rises dramatically towards Victoria Peak, is the horse-racing track at Happy Valley.


Points of Interest
Happy Valley Race Track (Horse-Racing)
Holding its first horse race in 1846, Happy Valley is one of the oldest racing venues in Hong Kong. The track is very crowded on Wednesday evenings and on weekend afternoons during horseracing season from September to June.                       

Shopping
Little Japan
Causeway Bay has alway been a popular shopping area but with the arrival of several major Japanese department store chains (Matsuzakaya, Mitsukoshi and, of course, the ten-story mega-store for Sogo) in the 1970's, the area, particularly around the MTR stop, has become known locally as "little Japan".

Hennesy Road/Yee Woo Streets
These roads are teeming with designer clothing stores including Lane Crawford which occasionally holds terrific sale
s with unbeatable prices. Be careful if you come to this area on a Saturday, however, as it's jam-packed full of shoppers.

Jardines Bazaar
The area still has plenty of Chinese flavor, too. For a glimpse, head over to Jardine's Bazaar just off Yee Woo Street where each street has a specialty. Irving Street has shops selling soya sauce and wine. Fuk Hing Lane has the famous Chinese delicacy 100 year-old eggs. Finally, Pennington Street is known for its Chinese Medical Halls and pawn shops.                

Times Square
Completed in 1994, the massive Times Square center has changed the landscape of Causeway Bay. Locally designed (by Wong & Ouyang), the development of 2 million square feet is home to a twelve-story shopping arcade with over 200 shops, restaurants, and a Cineplex and topped off by two office towers which are named after their two largest tenants: Shell Tower at 39 floors and NatWest Tower at 46 floors. Just outside the myriad of shops, entertainment, is Times Square Plaza . Here you will find the city's largest Sony Jumbotron, the site of New Year's celebrations (as with its counterpart in New York), and the most popular meeting spot in Hong Kong.

Transportation
Cross-Harbour Tunnel
The road traffic tunnel entrance is here and whisks you under Victoria Harbour to Tsim Sha Tsui East in a few minutes. If you are out after midnight on the other side of the harbor from your hotel, this (or the western access) is the most likely way you'll return.



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