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Antiquity

Aberdeen Harbour: travel ‘back in time’ around the fishing village

Written by South China Morning Post (Morning Studio)

Old photographs of the ‘floating villages’ in Aberdeen Harbour, located between Hong Kong Island’s southern coast and the outlying islet of Ap Lei Chau — showing thousands of fishing families living on traditional Chinese junk houseboats in the mid-1900s — are among the city’s most iconic and enduring images.

Take a stroll along the Ap Lei Chau Promenade and ride the kaito ferry to Aberdeen to take in local landmarks along the waterfront while enjoying the spectacular vistas looking out to sea.

  • Ap Lei Chau Hung Shing Temple

    Ap Lei Chau waterfront is home to Hung Shing Temple — built in 1773 — to worship Hung Shing, the ‘God of the South Sea’, to help protect fishermen. The official monument is one of Hong Kong’s oldest and best-preserved temples. It’s also one of the few Hung Shing temples largely unaffected by reclamation and has kept its original serene, feng shui setting — facing the sea. Inside you can see an original bell, cast in the year it was built, and prized Qing dynasty (1644–1911) Shiwan pottery. People always visit the temple to make offerings during the Hung Shing Festival, on the 13th day of the second lunar month. A stone’s throw away from the temple is the Ap Lei Chau Market Cooked Food Centre inside the Ap Lei Chau Municipal Services Building, where you can sample some of the local delicacies.

    Get me there
  • Ap Lei Chau Wind Tower Park

    Walking along the Ap Lei Chau Waterfront Promenade, you can see Ap Lei Chau Wind Tower Park ahead of you. Visitors can climb the 10-metre-high lookout tower, designed in the shape of a fishing boat, to enjoy the scenery. Solar panels power rows of LED lights, which change colour according to the wind speed detected by a sensor: all green when calm — increasingly orange as it grows breezy, and all red during gales or hurricanes. The park also features an exhibition gallery on Hong Kong's traditional fishing customs and the fishermen’s way of life.

    Get me there
  • Aberdeen Promenade

    The kaito ferry at Ap Lei Chau will take you to Aberdeen Promenade Park. The tree-lined walkway, which runs alongside Aberdeen Harbour, is a popular spot where visitors can relax and take selfies with the boats. But it offers more than stunning waterfront views: early risers can rub shoulders with elderly locals looking for bargains as moored boats sell freshly caught fish.

    A jar of freshly ground plaice powder — a natural fish stock commonly used for soups — will make a perfect souvenir of your lunch tour. You can buy a jar from fishermen on their boats moored beside the promenade.

    Get me there
  • Aberdeen Wholesale Fish Market

    If you buy live seafood in Hong Kong, there is a good chance it has been sourced from Aberdeen Wholesale Fish Market. Built in 1950, it’s the oldest and largest fish wholesale market in Hong Kong, which drew fishers from Cheung Chau, southern islands and even Macao to Aberdeen, supplying more than 70 per cent of the local live seafood. Looking at the cream-coloured structure with a green-tiled roof from afar, you can peer into various large fishing boats that line the market pier. The fishermen’s canteen inside the market serves freshly caught offerings from 4am daily. There is also a souvenir shop offering fish-related products and gifts.

    Get me there
  • Dining Option

    Lau Kee Boat Noodle

    Lau Kee Boat Noodles has been in operation for over 40 years and is the first boat with a licensed food factory in Hong Kong, allowing customers to order freshly prepared traditional fish broth noodles served directly from a rare and authentic ‘noodle boat’.

    Enjoy a bowl of boat noodles, crafted by fishermen with ingredients such as roasted meat, poached chicken, fish balls and vermicelli in soup. While dining, guest can watch fishing boats and sampans gliding through the typhoon shelter – a unique and nostalgic experience that’s hard to find elsewhere.

    Get me there

Transport

Getting to Ap Lei Chau Hung Shing Temple

From MTR Lei Tung Station, Exit A1
Walk harbourside along Wah Ting Street and turn right at the promenade. Hung Shing Temple will be on your right

Getting to Aberdeen from Ap Lei Chau

From Ap Lei Chau Pontoon
Take the kaito ferry outside Marina Habitat to the landing step outside Aberdeen Promenade. The trip takes about 4 minutes.

For details of the kaito ferry service, please visit the Transportation Department website.

Leaving from Aberdeen

To MTR Wong Chuk Hang Station
Take bus 48 or 78 from the Aberdeen Wholesale Fish Market

Local Tour

Aberdeen Fishing Village Tour (Aberdeen 1773)

On this tour, you will board a vintage sightseeing boat to cruise through the historic Aberdeen fishing village and discover the rich heritage of Hong Kong’s fishing community. The route includes several landmarks and photo spots such as the Tai Pak Floating Restaurant and Aberdeen Shipyards. An onboard audio guide shares fascinating cultural stories and local legends of the fishermen.

The tour features a visit to a traditional houseboat – a rare opportunity to step inside the former homes to water dwellers. Here, you can view historic photographs, cultural artefacts and participate in interactive experiences to gain insight into fishing customs and lifestyles.

A highlight of the Aberdeen 1773 experience is enjoying a bowl of Lau Kee Boat Noodles – a delicious meal that captures the true taste of old Hong Kong.

Seayou Explorer Travel Limited
Phone#: +852 2368 7000
Website: https://seayou.hk/en/category/cultural-tour-workshop

Disclaimer:
Details of the local tours are subject to the terms and conditions of the operators. The Hong Kong Tourism Board and the local operators reserve the right to amend, change or cancel any details concerning the tours at any time without prior notice. Customers can refer to the local operators if they have any enquiries.

More Routes

Antiquity

Aberdeen Harbour: travel ‘back in time’ around the fishing village

Written by South China Morning Post (Morning Studio)

Old photographs of the ‘floating villages’ in Aberdeen Harbour, located between Hong Kong Island’s southern coast and the outlying islet of Ap Lei Chau — showing thousands of fishing families living on traditional Chinese junk houseboats in the mid-1900s — are among the city’s most iconic and enduring images.

Take a stroll along the Ap Lei Chau Promenade and ride the kaito ferry to Aberdeen to take in local landmarks along the waterfront while enjoying the spectacular vistas looking out to sea.

Ap Lei Chau Hung Shing Temple

Ap Lei Chau waterfront is home to Hung Shing Temple — built in 1773 — to worship Hung Shing, the ‘God of the South Sea’, to help protect fishermen. The official monument is one of Hong Kong’s oldest and best-preserved temples. It’s also one of the few Hung Shing temples largely unaffected by reclamation and has kept its original serene, feng shui setting — facing the sea. Inside you can see an original bell, cast in the year it was built, and prized Qing dynasty (1644–1911) Shiwan pottery. People always visit the temple to make offerings during the Hung Shing Festival, on the 13th day of the second lunar month. A stone’s throw away from the temple is the Ap Lei Chau Market Cooked Food Centre inside the Ap Lei Chau Municipal Services Building, where you can sample some of the local delicacies.

See more...
Get me there

Ap Lei Chau Wind Tower Park

Walking along the Ap Lei Chau Waterfront Promenade, you can see Ap Lei Chau Wind Tower Park ahead of you. Visitors can climb the 10-metre-high lookout tower, designed in the shape of a fishing boat, to enjoy the scenery. Solar panels power rows of LED lights, which change colour according to the wind speed detected by a sensor: all green when calm — increasingly orange as it grows breezy, and all red during gales or hurricanes. The park also features an exhibition gallery on Hong Kong's traditional fishing customs and the fishermen’s way of life.

See more...
Get me there

Aberdeen Promenade

The kaito ferry at Ap Lei Chau will take you to Aberdeen Promenade Park. The tree-lined walkway, which runs alongside Aberdeen Harbour, is a popular spot where visitors can relax and take selfies with the boats. But it offers more than stunning waterfront views: early risers can rub shoulders with elderly locals looking for bargains as moored boats sell freshly caught fish.

See more...

A jar of freshly ground plaice powder — a natural fish stock commonly used for soups — will make a perfect souvenir of your lunch tour. You can buy a jar from fishermen on their boats moored beside the promenade.

Get me there

Aberdeen Wholesale Fish Market

If you buy live seafood in Hong Kong, there is a good chance it has been sourced from Aberdeen Wholesale Fish Market. Built in 1950, it’s the oldest and largest fish wholesale market in Hong Kong, which drew fishers from Cheung Chau, southern islands and even Macao to Aberdeen, supplying more than 70 per cent of the local live seafood. Looking at the cream-coloured structure with a green-tiled roof from afar, you can peer into various large fishing boats that line the market pier. The fishermen’s canteen inside the market serves freshly caught offerings from 4am daily. There is also a souvenir shop offering fish-related products and gifts.

See more...
Get me there
Dining Option

Lau Kee Boat Noodle

Lau Kee Boat Noodles has been in operation for over 40 years and is the first boat with a licensed food factory in Hong Kong, allowing customers to order freshly prepared traditional fish broth noodles served directly from a rare and authentic ‘noodle boat’.

Enjoy a bowl of boat noodles, crafted by fishermen with ingredients such as roasted meat, poached chicken, fish balls and vermicelli in soup. While dining, guest can watch fishing boats and sampans gliding through the typhoon shelter – a unique and nostalgic experience that’s hard to find elsewhere.

See more...
Get me there

Transport

Getting to Ap Lei Chau Hung Shing Temple

From MTR Lei Tung Station, Exit A1
Walk harbourside along Wah Ting Street and turn right at the promenade. Hung Shing Temple will be on your right

Getting to Aberdeen from Ap Lei Chau

From Ap Lei Chau Pontoon
Take the kaito ferry outside Marina Habitat to the landing step outside Aberdeen Promenade. The trip takes about 4 minutes.

For details of the kaito ferry service, please visit the Transportation Department website.

Leaving from Aberdeen

To MTR Wong Chuk Hang Station
Take bus 48 or 78 from the Aberdeen Wholesale Fish Market

Local Tour

Aberdeen Fishing Village Tour (Aberdeen 1773)

On this tour, you will board a vintage sightseeing boat to cruise through the historic Aberdeen fishing village and discover the rich heritage of Hong Kong’s fishing community. The route includes several landmarks and photo spots such as the Tai Pak Floating Restaurant and Aberdeen Shipyards. An onboard audio guide shares fascinating cultural stories and local legends of the fishermen.

The tour features a visit to a traditional houseboat – a rare opportunity to step inside the former homes to water dwellers. Here, you can view historic photographs, cultural artefacts and participate in interactive experiences to gain insight into fishing customs and lifestyles.

A highlight of the Aberdeen 1773 experience is enjoying a bowl of Lau Kee Boat Noodles – a delicious meal that captures the true taste of old Hong Kong.

Seayou Explorer Travel Limited
Phone#: +852 2368 7000
Website: https://seayou.hk/en/category/cultural-tour-workshop

Disclaimer:
Details of the local tours are subject to the terms and conditions of the operators. The Hong Kong Tourism Board and the local operators reserve the right to amend, change or cancel any details concerning the tours at any time without prior notice. Customers can refer to the local operators if they have any enquiries.

More Routes

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