Nam Cheong Street
Street in Hong Kong From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Street in Hong Kong From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Native name | 南昌街 (Chinese) |
---|---|
Namesake | An announcement on No. 616 of Hong Kong Government Gazette on 14 April 1961 [1] |
Type | Street |
Length | 1.7 mi (2.7 km) |
Width | 4 lanes |
Location | Sham Shui Po, Hong Kong[2] |
From | Lung Ping Road and Yan Ping Road |
To | Tung Chau Street and Boundary Street |
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Nam Cheong Street (Chinese: 南昌街) is a street in Shek Kip Mei and Sham Shui Po, Sham Shui Po District, Kowloon, Hong Kong. It begins in the north at Lung Ping Road and Yan Ping Road in Shek Kip Mei and terminates in the south at Tung Chau Street and Boundary Street in Sham Shui Po.
Nam Cheong Street takes its name from Nanchang, a city in China. Most streets in Sham Shui Po are named after Chinese cities.[3]
There are speculations about its origins. One of them suggest that it may had been from Chan Nam Chong.[4] A section of Nam Cheong Street at Ki Lung Street has wholesale, retail, ribbon, and zipper shops. Therefore, it is called lace street.
Parkone (Chinese: 南昌一號; lit. 'No. 1 Nam Cheong'), Nam Cheong Estate, Nam Cheong station, Nam Cheong Place (南昌薈, formerly Fu Cheong Shopping Centre 富昌商場) and Nam Cheong Park are all named after the street. Apart from Parkone, all of these features are located south of the southern end of Nam Cheong Street.
Nam Cheong Street was laid out in the 1920s.[5]
Nam Cheong street features many old Chinese-style buildings and shops. From Un Chau Street to Tung Chau Street, there are only six parking spots among its two lanes.
The section from Wai Lun Street to Cornwall Street is a big slope. There is also a Transport Department center at Nam Cheong Street.
Developers had already acquired or own tenement buildings/tong lau and would demolished them and turn them into luxury residential or commercial buildings. Buildings currently under construction are Parkone, Nam Cheong Street and Berwick Street and Yiu Tung Street etc. The view of the street has changed over time.
Features from south to north include:
Intersections from south to north:
"The Prince Near You" (Chinese: 南昌街王子, "The Prince of Nam Cheong Street") is a song by Fiona Sit composed and written is Terence Lam and Wyman Wong, respectively. There are not a lot of new buildings in this street. Most are tenements or tong lau. This is why The Prince in Nam Cheong Street may not live in a castle.
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