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Wanchai-Causeway Bay Overview & Map Weather Transportation Information
Wan Chai is an area situated at the western part of the Wan Chai District, in northern Hong Kong Island, formerly a favorite place for sailors to take R&R, is now a fabulous shopping centre and a popular tourist attraction. Causeway Bay in Wan Chai is a popular shopping site, it is a heavily built-up area of Hong Kong, located on the northern shore of Hong Kong Island, and covering parts of Wan Chai and Eastern districts. The Chinese name is also romanized as Tung Lo Wan as in Tung Lo Wan Road.
Have a look at Wan Chai
Just east of the Central district, Wanchai district is an interesting area. Wan Chai is identified in tourist circles for its two specialities, shopping and nightlife. The bustling commercial centre, located in the vicinity of the Central District, offers not only astonishing range of shopping but also fun-filled nightlife. Besides, it also holds several impressive old and modern buildings.
Getting around
Wan Chai is one of the busiest commercial areas in Hong Kong with many small- and medium-sized companies gathering, likewise various shopping centers and restaurants serving cuisines of different countries. Wan Chai North features office towers, parks, hotels and a world-class conference centre.
Hong Kong Convention & Exhibition Center
It is the most famous place here. In the Center is Xinyi Hall where the ceremony marking Hong Kong's return to China in 1997 was held. This beautiful hall looks like a sea-gull spreading its wings. In front of the Xinyi Hall is Bauhinia Square. The sculpture of golden bauhinia there is a present that was given by the Chinese mainland government to celebrate the founding of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. Every day there is a flag raising ceremony in honor of Hong Kong's returning to China.
Victoria Park
The exquisite Victoria Park, Hong Kong's largest urban park, is situated in the center of Causeway Bay and contains a pleasant outdoor swimming pool (HKD17) and various sports facilities. It is a nice place to just walk around and watch the locals relaxing and performing Tai Chi. A statue of Queen Victoria (originally in Statue Square in Central) stands here.
Numerous football matches and tennis games take place throughout the year in the park. Current affairs debates (similar to those in Hyde Park in London) are held here at the weekends. Before Chinese New Year, there is a large flower market held in the park and the gardens are beautifully lit with traditional Chinese lanterns during the Moon festival in September or November.
Shopping
Here, you definitely have a pleasant shopping. It is crowded most of the time but here you can eat and shop until very late. Causeway Bay in Wan Chai is a popular shopping site, it is a heavily built-up area of Hong Kong, located on the northern shore of Hong Kong Island, and covering parts of Wan Chai and Eastern districts. The Chinese name is also romanized as Tung Lo Wan as in Tung Lo Wan Road.
Well-known shopping stores
Wanchai-Causeway Bay includes the 13-storey Japanese department store Sogo and Times Square, an indoor shopping complex. Times Square, a symbol of Causeway Bay, is the biggest emporium in this area and one of the top ten scenic sites in Hong Kong. Many well-known brands of clothing can be found here. It is also the perfect place to hold large-scale activities. Every year on New Year's Eve, the New Year Countdown Ceremony is held here, and hundreds of thousands of locals participate.
There are also smaller malls such as World Trade Centre, Windsor House, Hang Lung Centre, Fashion Island, Fashion Walk, Lee Gardens and Lee Gardens Two. Although Causeway Bay is famous mainly for stocking luxury brands, reasonably priced items can also be found here. The stalls in Jardine's Bazaar where fashionable costumes and accessories are sold at normal prices are also very popular.
Enjoying delicious food
You can fully enjoy Hong Kong style snacks and seafood in Causeway Bay. Most of the shops and restaurants here stay open until late when the area becomes a colorful world flashing with neon and crowded with people. It is a favorite activity to take a boat or sampan and sail around the harbor, enjoying the beautiful evening and the delicious food.
Wanchai-Causeway Bay Highlights
Wanchai-Causeway Bay FAQ & Travelers's Tips
- When is the best time to shop in Hong Kong?
- Top ten tips for shopping in Hong Kong
- Beware of fake products
- Watch your belongings
- Don't wanna get ripped off? Take a look at these bargain tips.
- Before you leave the mall, make sure you have done this.
- Can I get a refund if I don't like what I just bought anymore?
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When is the best time to shop in Hong Kong?
Summer is possibly the best time to shop in Hong Kong as incredible deals are offered during the annual Hong Kong Shopping Festival. The massive sales draw shoppers from all over Asia every year.
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Top ten tips for shopping in Hong Kong
1, Compare Prices
Check the price of the item you want to buy in your home country first. When you arrive in Hong Kong you should check out some of the larger department stores or reputable dealers for your product. You can't start bargaining until you know how much you should be paying.
2, Understand the Exchange Rate
This may sound simple, but one of the main reasons for tourists getting ripped-off in Hong Kong is because they don't know the exchange rate - make sure you do.
3, Know the Product
Know exactly what you want to buy. Which features do you want, accessories, model. Again, looking around in your home country and at reputable stores in Hong Kong means you'll have some honest advice.
4, Choose Your Shop Carefully.
The Hong Kong Tourism Board has a Quality Control Scheme that vets shops on pricing, honesty and a host of other attributes - these shops generally don't offer bargains but are reputable. Unless you are confident of price and product, you should also avoid shops that don't clearly display the price of an item.
5, Shop Around
If you're determined to go bargain hunting, shop around. Hong Kong salespeople are notoriously aggressive when negotiating, however the ball is in your court, if you don't like the salesperson or the price quoted is to high, move on to the next store.
6, Check the Product
Hong Kong shops have an undeserved reputation for using switch and bait tactics, this involves showing you one product but placing an inferior item in the box. This practice is not widespread, nevertheless you need to make sure what you think you're buying is what you leave the store with.
7, Compatibility
Ensure compatibility. Check the voltage and broadcast of any item you want to buy.
8, Warranty
Make sure the product has an international warranty. This can be a problem with 'Parallel Imports', these products are usually brought into Hong Kong by someone other than the official importer, and are often electronic items. Although cheap, their warranty is usually void.
9, Beware of Bootlegs
There are plenty of bootleg and illegal products on Hong Kong's streets, which police usually turn a blind eye to, however if you are found with these at customs, they are subject to confiscation and you possibly to conviction.
10, Last Call
If you're in dispute, call the Consumer Council Hotline on 2929 2222 for assistance, you can also approach uniformed hawker police who patrol markets. -
Beware of fake products
Hong Kong is flooded with fakes, or copies as they are known here, from handbags to teabags, everything is produced in China, shipped over the border and sold at rock-bottom prices. Fakes and copy products at Mongkok Ladies Market are on offer openly. We dont endorse buying copy produce, and if you do, youll have no recourse if something goes wrong, which it often does.
The main copies on offer at the Ladies Market are fake watches or fake handbags, both of which can be made to order, and are usually of extremely good value. However, remember what you are doing is illegal and raids at the Ladies Market are rare but not unheard of, and if something is faulty, refunds certainly are unheard of.
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Watch your belongings
Hong Kong is a very full city and especially on busy places a Walhalla for pickpocketers. So, hold on tight to your belongings and don't leave your purse on a visible place (like your trousers' backpocket). If you go from Hong Kong on a tour to one of the neighboring Chinese towns, be prepared to see poverty in the real. Little children with big dark eyes, dressed in extremely old and dirty cloths will beg and you have to be pretty strong to say 'no'.
Tip: if you plan this ahead, take old toys and other things from home as gifts and you will see smiles that you will never forget!
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Don't wanna get ripped off? Take a look at these bargain tips.
Many people rave about the shopping in Hong Kong, and by the way they are right to do so. With this in mind, you need to be aware that not all is as it seems. There are legitimate bargains to be found but you need to be careful what you buy. Items like watches and designer brands are only going to be a bargain if you buy them from the outlet which officially sells them like those outlet shops in the only outlet mall in Hong Kong - Citygate Outlets. 'Get your CK Jeans from a CK outlet. Common sense perhaps but many people seemed to get lured in to buying the cheap rip-off copies.' The best deals to be had are on arts and crafts, unbranded clothes and alike. Temple Street Night market is a great place to grab such bargains and offers a more comfortable experience given that it is running at (you guessed it) night time. Stanley Market is another goodie but is a considerable distance away. Both are reachable on short excursions organized by most of the tour operators, and your hotels are often able to advise on where the best local operators work. Hong Kong is literally laden with small markets and stalls. Its great fun to haggle and expected, but please keep in mind that some times you are bartering over a matter of pennies.
After reading these tips for bargaining, now you can go in the street and review you lesson in real 'shopping battlefield'.
The kinds of things to look for would be 5 silk ties for 1/$1.50 (HK$13), Paintings for the same, Trousers, shorts, skirts, dresses and shirts for a 2/$3's. Suits are definitely available for low prices. Seasoned travelers suggest that you stick to the Chinese Tailors in the shopping centers and do your deals with them. Do not try to save a few pennies by using backstreet shops (which you are taken to by the high street representatives hanging around on most corners). Whilst looking, try to meet the tailor. Generally they are close by. The best deals here are on suits sitting on the peg which they just need to adjust. Start your haggling at between HK$450-500 and don't pay more than HK$1000 for a reasonable material (one which when crushed in your hand doesn't show creases or folds when you let it go, and one that feels quite light - as a basic rule of thumb!). Any more and you are not getting a bargain.
Peddlers you are not interested in can still be quite intense. A polite but firm 'No' is more than enough to display that you are not interested. You might be pleased to hear that HK Police are in force in the bigger markets, plain clothed and in pairs (distinguishable when you look for them), and this acts as a great deterrent for most petty thieves. You should always remain alert and always have your bags and wallets in safe positions. Always check your wallet if you are bumped in to or brushed passed. Again, this is common sense but it is better to keep reminding yourself.
The markets can be great fun, and if you are looking for bargains, these are the places to shop. Some good markets are: Ladies' Market (full of replicas and cheap and sometimes cheerful accessories) in bustling Mong Kok; Stanley Market for more touristy kitschy stuff (think little purses with Chinese embroidery) plus clothing outlets and linens (then have a bite with a view at the slew of places nearby); Fa Yuen Street in Prince Edward/Mong Kok for cheap, trendy gal's clothes and shoes (but you have to be a US size 0-2 to fit into anything). For antique accessories and more Chinese kitsch (low quality, but sometimes cool jade pendants, Mao posters) go to Lascar Row in Sheung Wan (known locally as 'More Lore Gai'), a short walk from Sheung Wan MTR. -
Before you leave the mall, make sure you have done this.
Check Your Receipts. You should always get a sales receipt (street stalls sometimes do not provide them). Check to ensure that all details and verbal agreements are fully listed on the sales receipt. Make sure the product details listed match the product you have bought.
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Can I get a refund if I don't like what I just bought anymore?
Members of the Travel Industry Council of HK (TICHK) promise a refund if tourists are not satisfied with the goods within two weeks. For more information, please call the TICHK at +852 2807-0707.
Famous for shopping and nightlife, the bustling commercial center Wan Chai is a major attraction in Hong Kong. Of course, Wanchai-Causeway Bay here is a popular shopping site; crowded most of the time but here you can eat and shop until very late.

