Candy Cheung
Shun Kee Typhoon Shelter Seafood Owner
“We grew up here on the water. In the 1950s and 1960s, the Causeway Bay typhoon shelter used to be filled with these floating restaurants, but by the 90s, they’d begun to disappear. Some of the few that remained eventually shut down and opened up on-land instead. Many years later, around 2005, I was listening to the radio. It was a programme about Hong Kong tourism hotspots. The guest that week was Jackie Chan himself – and he said how he missed us typhoon shelter restaurants and wished we were still around. It got me thinking, and that’s how we decided to open back up!
It was a long process though. By the time we looked into it, it was already a different world. All the regulations had changed and getting a license was a lot harder. Also, we had to custom-order the boats from Mainland China because no one really builds these types of boats in Hong Kong any more. But this dream was really important to me, so we persisted and finally reopened in 2011. Back then, it was mostly locals who came, but these days, we get a lot of international visitors coming from all over the world to try our typhoon shelter crab and seafood on board these boats. It’s wonderful.”
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Causeway Bay: Then & Now
Feature
Causeway Bay embodies the many facets of Hong Kong – the fast pace, fascinating contrasts and dynamic energy. From the city’s very beginning to the present day, its diversity and vibrancy makes it a beloved neighbourhood.
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Uke
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“I’m wearing makeup and costume that I bought in Indonesia for performances and competitions. I’ve just finished buying something here in Causeway Bay…
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The Tsui Brothers
Cartoonists
“We’re the Tsui Brothers, the authors of Milktealogy. It’s our research project about ‘cha chaan teng’ culture here in Hong Kong…
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Paul & Jocelyn
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Jocelyn: “I moved to Hong Kong from the Chicago suburbs at the age of 11. Causeway Bay was a total assault on the senses in the best way possible – there is so much energy and vibrancy, but also an an instant connection to the pulse of Hong Kong.”
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Yiu Fung
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