Tong Shui Road

Tong Shui Road (Chinese: 糖水道) is a road on reclaimed land in North Point on Hong Kong Island. The road runs from Victoria Harbour at its northern end to a T-junction with King's Road in the south. An exit slip orad from the Island Eastern Corridor merges into and is named for Tong Shui Road. The North Point terminus of Hong Kong Tramway lies in the road, at the end of the adjoining Chun Yeung Street, home to North Point Market. Tong Shui Road Public Pier extends from the road's northern end, near Hotel Vic, on the site of the former North Point Estate.

The tram station at Tong Shui Road

History

Tong Shui in Chinese means sugar water. It was associated with Sugar King Kwok Chun Yeung (郭春秧; Kwik Djoen Eng in Hokkien) in the early 20th century. He had planned to build a sugar refinery on (two) plots of land he reclaimed, immediately to the west of today's Tong Shui Road. When the reclamation was completed, the sugar price dropped drastically, so he cancelled the plan and built a residential block instead. Also named after him within the reclaimed area is Chun Yeung Street (春秧街). Nearby Java Road is so named for the source of his sugar.[1]

gollark: If people want to for whatever insanely bizarre reason, I don't see why not.
gollark: If you force the price to be fixed low, you just get a shortage where the quantity actually sold is below the quantity demanded.
gollark: No, markets in the economicsy sense.
gollark: Limiting purchase numbers seems like a bad hack to prevent the market from working properly but at least make some people vaguely happy since they're paying the normal price.
gollark: … also, what if someone wants to buy an entire set of computer parts in order to, say, build a computer?

See also

References

  • 吾土吾情﹕荔園引入摩天輪, Sing Pao, published on March 19, 2005. (in Chinese)

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