Many views on the Hong Kong skyline

in #travelfeed6 years ago (edited)

Visiting Hong Kong had been a matter of opportunity. Good flight deals had convinced me to give a go at the city so here I was for 10 days. It seemed much at first and I was wondering how I was going to spend such an outrageous amount of time in one city. Little did I know that 10 days would be barely enough to scratch Hong Kong’s surface. By the end of my trip, I knew for a fact it wasn’t even enough to be fed up with its skyline, no matter how many times I saw it.

I had arrived a couple days earlier without much expectation but a first gaze at the ocean of lush mountains and skyscrapers stretching to the horizon, right out of the airport, had taken my breath away quite literally. The closer the skyscrapers grew, the wider my eyes got. When the bus entered the large Nathan Road, where my hotel was located, I had to focus on the names of the stops but my attention was grabbed by the endless neon signs all around me, making my head dizzy.

I got out just one stop too far and had to go back to find the entrance of the Chungking Mansions. It had a reputation for being the cheapest building in Hong Kong and I did not know what to expect of it. As it turned out, it was best I expected nothing. The entrance of the building looked like a casino and the first few stores seemed alright, although the atmosphere was feverish. The further I walked, the more dubious the stores got. Some of them looked like they were selling items straight off the back of a truck. I walked past them and got to one of the few lifts in the building but there already was a long line and the out-dated lift could only contain a handful of people.

A couple days later, I had grown accustomed of my tiny room with almost no wi-fi, as I had of the shady stores selling second-hand cell phones, suspicious Chinese visas and porn magazines. I wasn’t even trying to use the lift anymore and the smell of moist and piss in the stairs did not bother me. The Chungking Mansions was my home in Hong Kong.

The city had unveiled quite a few of its mysteries but I was still looking eagerly at the skyline across Victoria Harbour, which seemed so close from the Tsim Sha Tsui Promenade near my hotel but felt like a whole world away. I couldn’t wait to discover the island of Hong Kong but first, I was meeting a friend at the Hong Kong University.

Just like every university in my book, I was expecting a grey, rather dull building. Therefore I thought I was in the wrong place when I discovered a rainforest instead. Students were coming and going with little regard for the signs warning them of monkeys. Yet, it all seemed fascinating to me, especially as I recalled my home university in France where the only fine specimen I could hope to see were pigeons.

The whole area near the University was of the same ilk with streets buried under dense vegetation. Creepers falling out of trees were a common sight and the cries of exotic birds a common sound, as if nature had been allowed to grow freely in the city and had become part of it entirely.

I felt the same way when I got out of the subway and into the CBD. Nature seemed a little more domesticated there but it still lied at the feet of every heritage building the British had left behind and every futuristic glass skyscraper the new city had erected. As I walked deeper into the CBD, a yellow façade struck me. St John’s Cathedral stuck like a sore thumb in the midst of all these grey titans tickling the skies, looking out of a place in a city that was on perpetual move. In the shadow of intimidatingly high buildings, it also felt like a welcome haven, sitting at the heart of the hectic CBD but feeling miles away.

I sat there for a while, until a group of local school girls approached me giggling. When one of them dared ask for a picture with me, all her friends followed suit. They took picture upon picture, as if I was a celebrity of sorts. Perhaps they’d pin this picture on their fridge door or just keep it on their phones forever and forget why they even took it in the first place. I smiled thinking of the many ways in which those pictures could end and kept smiling even as I was queuing to access the tramway going up to the Victoria Peak.

Seeing the skyline from the ground was one thing indeed but I had to see it from above too. The tram going to the top of the Victoria Peak was so heavily advertised that I had to try it for myself, no matter how overpriced it was. Granted, the ride was pleasant, yet it was nothing compared to the panoramic view awaiting when I came off of it.

On one side was the city’s majestic skyline and the Kowloon Peninsula just across Victoria Harbour, where the iconic and last remaining junk boat was sailing, a red dot from above that looked like a ghost from the city’s past. On the other were lush mountains and wild islands emerging from the sea. On one side was endless wilderness and another side was frantic urban landscapes, but perhaps both were merging into one.

I decided to skip on the tram on the way back and found a path going to the city. I followed the Old Peak Road where thick foliage kept the city hidden for a while before it resurfaced again every now and then beyond the trees. I had now seen the Hong Kong skyline from every point of view. Every one of them was beautiful in its own unique way.

I came back the next day to enjoy the illuminations at night I came back a couple years later to watch fireworks lighting up the sky over the harbour. One thing was clear, I’d never get tired of the skyline magic.

[//]:# (!steemitworldmap 22.330317 lat 114.170272 long d3scr)
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Beautiful photos! It has been many years since I was in Hong Kong and your photos brought back nice memories for me. I also had the experience with people on the street coming up to me and wanting to have their picture taken with me and I finally figured out that they just wanted to try out their in English on a real live foreigner. Or are you tall? One of my friends was a big hit because of his 6 ft height!

Thank you for your comment. I'm glad this article reminded you of some great memories of your time in Hong Kong! :)

I think you're onto something! I've been approached by locals in other Asian countries and it felt like they were eager to practice their English indeed. From my experience, English is taught in many countries through reading and listening but there isn't much room for actual conversations so talking to a real foreigner is quite the experience. :)
I'm not tall at all so that can't be the explanation. As funny as it may sound though, I have a long nose and a small face and I've been told by some Asian friends that these were features that many Asian people were quite fond of. ^^

I'm so surprised to see so much green in Hong Kong. I have been in SE Asia for a few years now and have never gotten there. The airfare is always outrageous when I want to go.

I'm wondering if the air was smoggy. It seems to be in your photos.

And good on you to go cheap for accommodation. This was another place I was seeing sky-high prices when I looked.

I was really surprised too when I got there but nature truly is a wonderful, and unexpected, part of Hong Kong. :)

I actually flew there from Japan with China Eastern and was expecting to stay for a couple days only but was there for 10 days since flight tickets would have been too expensive otherwise. Hong Kong is a costly city to visit for sure but I found it was definitely worth it, even though I had to lower my standards when it came to accommodation. ^^'

The air was a bit smoggy when I visited in May but I've met people who visited in February and March and said the weather was much worse. I guess you can't really escape this kind of smog in such a huge city but, to be fair, it didn't bother me too much.

Yes, that is why my flights were always expensive too. I think it's always better to stay long for the flight cost. I might just have to bite the bullet and go anyway. I've been in Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur in the spring and both places had bad air on occasion. I'm one of few not masked up :)

I've heard many stories about accommodation in Hong Kong and I see that you chose the cheaper end of the story :) But at least you got used to it and didn't mind anymore. I would probably feel claustrophobic in such a space. And no wifi? At least you could spend more time outside :)

It's amazing to see how varied this city is. You have monstrous skyscrapers and beautiful nature living in a harmony. That university place looks like an ideal place to study. I would probably watch out for those monkeys though :)

Thank you for sharing your story and your picture. It's been a pleasure to join you on your trip.

Have a lovely day!

I didn't choose the fanciest accommodation in the city, that's for sure! It's true that my room was very tiny but I didn't spend much time in it so that was fine. And let's say that there was Wi-Fi but it was very fickle and worked only when it wanted to. ^^

Hong Kong is a really surprising city indeed. I didn't expect nature to be so embedded in the city but that's a mix made in heaven! I've been there twice and it's one of those places where you're craving to go back since there are so many extraordinary things to discover.
I wish my university back in France would have been the same! xD But you're right, those monkeys are quite mischievous.

Thank you for sharing your thoughts on this article and glad you've enjoyed this story. Have a lovely day as well! :)

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