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  • Stanley
    Stanley's French Restaurant, on Hong Kong Island, is housed in an old colonial-style building.
  • Stanley
    Stanley's French Restaurant, on the south side of Hong Kong Island, is a popular spot for lunch or dinner.
  • Pottinger Street, Central District
    Constrasting styles of clothing can be seen: the traditional white-top and black trousers worn by servants versus the modern cheongsams worn by noble women. The hawker food-stalls on the right have not changed very much. This street was the original home of a Hong Kong landmark, the Yung Kee Restaurant, famous for its roasted goose.
  • Lai Chi Kok
    A Chinese restaurant at Lai Chi Kok.
  • Tai Pak Floating Restaurant, Aberdeen
    The three well-known floating restaurants (Jumbo Floating Restaurant, Tai Pak Floating Restaurant and Sea Palace Restaurant) anchored in Sham Wan form an attractive feature in the Southern District. Tourists could taste the freshness and deliciousness of sea food besides enjoying the picturesque scene at sunset when the sea reflects the glamourous decorative lights embellishing those vessels.
  • Sea Palace Restaurant, Aberdeen
    The three well-known floating restaurants (Jumbo Floating Restaurant, Tai Pak Floating Restaurant and Sea Palace Restaurant) anchored in Sham Wan form an attractive feature in the Southern District. Tourists could taste the freshness and deliciousness of sea food besides enjoying the picturesque scene at sunset when the sea reflects the glamourous decorative lights embellishing those vessels.
  • Peak Cafe
    The Peak Cafe building was originally built in 1901 as a chair shelter for both private and public sedan chairs. Prior to this, the site housed a workshop and shelter for the British engineers responsible for the construction of the Peak tramline. The present structure bears little similarities with the original as can be seen in old photographs - open arches built with concrete have been fitted with doors; the wooden truss with steel reinforcement now sits on a brick and concrete wall on top of the load-bearing stone walls. It is difficult to ascertain how much of the original has been retained or refurbished. In 1947, the building was converted into a cafe.
  • Cheung Chau
    An outdoor restaurant at Cheung Chau.
  • Lau Fau Shan, Yuen Long
    Lau Fau Shan is famous for its oyster beds which fill more than 3,000 hectares of shoreline around the small coastal settlement. It is also a popular location for eating seafood. There is a main street with a number of seafood stalls where enormous range of live seafood and shellfish are available. They can be freshly cooked in the seafood restaurants nearby.