Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - Help! ! Where is the address of the second-hand market in Hong Kong? Is there a big market with complete items?

Help! ! Where is the address of the second-hand market in Hong Kong? Is there a big market with complete items?

During the period of 1968, the government planned to build a henry g leong community service center near Tin Hau Temple Square, which caused more than 200 mobile hawkers operating there to be dissatisfied with the relocation arrangement. After coordination between the Yau Ma Tei Kaifong Association and the Hong Kong Police, the government decided to set aside stalls on Temple Street and Shanghai Street near Rongshutou for resettlement, but they were allocated by lottery.

1In March, 1975, the then Hong Kong Urban Council designated a "hawker-approved area" in Temple Street, which enabled the original hawkers in Temple Street to be systematically managed. Temple Street Hawker Recognition Zone includes Wenming Lane to Zhong Fang Street and Gansu Street to Nanjing Street, and there are nearly 600 designated places for hawkers to place their wares. The booth was originally opened at night, and the business hours of the middle part of 1998 were changed from noon.

Miaojie feature

Every evening, the stalls along the temple street will open. The goods sold in those stalls are quite diverse, including men's wear, handicrafts, tea sets, jade articles, antiques and even cheap electronic products. There are also many fortune-telling and photo-viewing booths near Tianhou Temple, and there will be Cantonese opera performances. In the early years, some martial artists performed here to sell art and medicine.

In addition, there are many stalls selling special snacks in Temple Street, such as seafood, clay pot rice and various pasta. The price is not expensive, the standard is quite good, and it is also very popular with local residents and even foreign tourists.

Temple street is not long, but there are many people on holidays, which is enough for you to walk for a long time. Tired of walking, you might as well walk into a dessert shop and drink a bowl of mung bean paste to drive away the summer heat. At the end of Temple Street, there are several food stalls. You can sit down and eat seafood and taste Indian flavor, or just stand by and chew a few strings of beef balls and fish eggs on the road.

There are also some sparrow pavilions in Temple Street, some of which have decades of history and have traditional cultural characteristics. Most of them are patronized by the older generation.

Tin Hau Temple is located in Banyan Tree Head, Yau Ma Tei, which divides a temple street into two parts. The south wall of the temple is very quiet, and there are fortune-telling stalls all the way. The stall owners put on a half-fairy appearance one by one, some people really sat down and asked about their future, and some young men and women came to ask about marriage events. If you come early, you might as well go to the east, where a group of Cantonese opera fans are playing and singing, offering you the original Cantonese opera.