1. Nathan Road:
Nathan Road, one of the most famous streets in Hong Kong, is located in Kowloon, Hong Kong, connecting the two main business districts of Mong Kok and Tsim Sha Tsui. It is the main road in the Kowloon district. It runs from the waterfront in Tsim Sha Tsui to Boundary Street, north of the Kowloon Peninsula, and is lined with many commercial and residential buildings. The section from Jordan to Tsim Sha Tsui has gradually become a shopping area. At night, tourists are like fish in water with a dazzling variety of neon signs.
2. Hollywood Road:
Hollywood Road, sometimes called Hollywood Road, is an essential tourist attraction for tourists visiting Hong Kong. It is located in the center of Sheung Wan, Hong Kong. It was the first street built after the opening of Hong Kong, and the name "Hollywood Road" has nothing to do with the Hollywood of the American film industry, but is derived from the Hollywood surrounding the early Hollywood.
Hollywood Road connects to Lan Kwai Fong at its eastern end, where the old Central Police Station is located, and the Dragon I bar in the central plaza of the old Central Guard Station attracts soccer stars to Hong Kong. The Central-to-Central Hills Escalator System, which connects Central to the Central Hills, also runs through Hollywood Road. A section of Hollywood Road near Stair Street at the end of Sheung Wan is home to the famous Hollywood Road Man Mo Temple.
3. Gaslamp Street:
Gas Street, also known as "Tai Lei Street", has been the setting for many Hong Kong TV dramas and movies, most of which have used it as a microcosm of Hong Kong. Gas Street itself is a small street with only one end open to traffic, and there is a granite staircase between this street and Hok Cheong Street. There are four gas lamps on either side of the staircase, the only four lamps in Hong Kong today.
Before the 1950s, gas lamps were not uncommon in Hong Kong. They were Hong Kong's main lighting street lamps. But by the 1970s, gas lamps had been replaced by electric lamps. Now there are only four left, which is precious. This part of the gas lamps is listed as a legal monument on August 15, 1979 in Hong Kong. Now, this part of the gas lamp is lit from 6pm until 6am every day for street lighting.
Extended information:
The present-day significance of Hong Kong's big and small streets:
Boundary Street is still the Kowloon-New Kowloon dividing line. Properties located to the north of Boundary Street are required to pay Government rent to the Hong Kong Government. It is also the boundary between Yau Tsim Mong District and Sham Shui Po District/Kowloon City District, with Sham Shui Po District/Kowloon City District to the north of Boundary Street and Yau Tsim Mong District to the south.
The current situation of Hong Kong's big and small streets:
The middle part of Boundary Street is the luxury residential area of Kowloon Chai, where most of the residents are middle class, and the area is also the location of many famous schools such as Maryknoll Convent School and La Salle College; while the west side is Sham Shui Po and Tai Kok Tsui, where the residents are mainly lower-middle class and new immigrants.