Connaught Road (original) (raw)
Road in Hong Kong
Connaught Road
Connaught Road Central at night in March 2015, with Exchange Square on the left | |
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Native name | 干諾道 (Yue Chinese) |
Namesake | Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn |
Length | 5.3 kilometres (3.3 mi) |
Location | Wan Chai, Hong Kong |
East end | Harcourt Road / Murray Road / Edinburgh Place |
West end | Shing Sai Road |
Connaught Road | |
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Traditional Chinese | 干諾道 |
Simplified Chinese | 干诺道 |
Cantonese Yale | Gon nohk douh |
Jyutping | Gon1 nok6 dou6 |
TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinGānnuò DàoYue: CantoneseYale RomanizationGon nohk douhJyutpingGon1 nok6 dou6 | |
1911 map showing Connaught Road on the Central Waterfront
Connaght Road Central c.1923
Connaught Road in the 1930s
Connaught Road is a major thoroughfare on the north shore of Hong Kong Island, Hong Kong. It links Shing Sai Road in Kennedy Town to the west and Harcourt Road in Admiralty to the east.
The road consists of two adjoining sections, namely Connaught Road Central (干諾道中) and Connaught Road West (干諾道西).
Connaught Road Central runs the length of Central, parallel to the north shore. It runs from approximately Admiralty in the east, where it connects Harcourt Road at the junction with Murray Road. The road ends west at On Tai Street, where it becomes Connaught Road West.
Connaught Road West runs towards the Kennedy Town and Pok Fu Lam areas in the west. For most of the stretch, Connaught Road West runs beneath the Connaught Road West Flyover, (Route 4). It is the main thoroughfare to the entrance of the Western Harbour Crossing and beyond to Shek Tong Tsui, where it merges with Des Voeux Road West.
This road was once a waterfront promenade with boats docked against the northern side of the road. In 1889, the north shore of Victoria City was under extensive reclamation. In 1890, Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn visited Hong Kong, when Francis Fleming, the then acting governor announced a new road to be constructed in front of the old "Bowring Praya" (present-day Des Voeux Road). This newly constructed road was then named Connaught Road, after the prince.[1] A statue of the Duke once also occupied the junction of Pedder Street.[1]
Connaught Road West was lined with many piers in the past. Rice wholesalers gathered there owing to its proximity to the shore. Due to the reclamation of the harbour, the entire length of Connaught Road has now become landlocked.
Structures along Connaught Road
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Connaught Road Central
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- AIG Tower
- Hong Kong Club Building
- Statue Square
- Hong Kong City Hall
- Mandarin Oriental, Hong Kong
- Connaught Place
- Chater House
- Jardine House
- Central Elevated Walkway
- World-Wide House
- Exchange Square
- International Finance Centre Tower One
- Wing On House
- Hang Seng Bank Headquarters Building
- Shun Tak Centre
Connaught Road West
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- Sun Yat Sen Memorial Park
- Witty Street Depot of the Hong Kong Tramways
- Western Wholesale Food Market
- Western Harbour Crossing
- Liaison Office of the Central People's Government
- Hotel Marriott Courtyard Hong Kong [yue; zh-tw]
- Island Pacific Hotel
Connaught Road frontage of Chater House in July 2008
AIG Tower, 1 Connaught Road Central in August 2006
The Mandarin Oriental Hotel in December 2006
Statue Square abuts Connaught Road in May 2006
The Hong Kong Club Building's frontage on Connaught Road in April 2007
City Hall facing Connaught Road in September 2004
Henry Moore's sculpture, Connaught Place in 2007
The Central Elevated Walkway crosses Connaught Road in June 2007
Connaught Road, looking west in January 2006 (1IFC on the right)
New Headquarters of the Hang Seng Bank in April 2007
Connaught Road West Flyover leading up to the Shun Tak Centre (background) in August 2005
Wing On House (middle); the two buildings to the right are the old and new headquarters of Hang Seng Bank in September 2004
ChinaChem Plaza and the China Insurance Group Building are both on Connaught Road Central in April 2007
Connaught Road West at night in October 2019- List of streets and roads in Hong Kong
- Pedder Street
- ^ a b Wordie, Jason (18 April 1999). "Land-grabbing titans who changed HK's profit for good". The Standard. Archived from the original on 22 May 2011. Retrieved 4 December 2011.
22°16′51.60″N 114°9′46.80″E / 22.2810000°N 114.1630000°E / 22.2810000; 114.1630000