Area and village in Hong Kong
Chek Keng and Chek Keng Hau (赤徑口 on a foggy spring day.
Holy Family Chapel in Chek Keng.
Village houses in Chek Keng.
Mangrove at Chek Keng.
Bradbury Hall youth hostel.
Chek Keng (Chinese : 赤徑 ) is an area and village of Sai Kung North in Hong Kong . It is administratively part of Tai Po District .
Location
Chek Keng is located within Sai Kung East Country Park ,[ 1] on the northern coast of Sai Kung Peninsula and facing the Chek Keng Hau (赤徑口 ) aka East Arm Bay of Long Harbour .[ 2]
Administration
Chek Keng is a recognized village under the New Territories Small House Policy .[ 3]
History
Chek Keng was probably founded more than 200 years ago. It was historically a multi-surname Hakka village. It was reported in 2003 that Chek Keng had only one resident, an 84 year old woman.[ 4]
Features
Chapel
The Holy Family Chapel (聖家小堂 ) in Chek Keng was built in 1874 to replace an earlier chapel that had been severely damaged by a storm in 1867. The whole village later converted to Catholicism. During the Japanese Occupation of Hong Kong , the chapel was a base of the Hong Kong-Kowloon Independent Battalion of the East River Guerrilla (東江縱隊港九獨立大隊 ).[ 5] [ 6] The chapel is listed as a Grade II historic building .[ 7]
Others
Chek Keng Pier
Bradbury Hall youth hostel[ 8]
Transportation
Chek Keng is not accessible by car. It is located along the Stage 2 of the MacLehose Trail , about an hour's walk from Pak Tam Au .[ 2]
A kai-to service is available between Wong Shek , Wan Tsai (Nam Fung Wan) and Chek Keng.[ 9]
References
^ Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department . Sai Kung East Country Park Archived 2014-08-23 at the Wayback Machine
^ a b Ng, Kang-chung (16 October 2019). "How an abandoned village deep in a Hong Kong country park, inaccessible by road and poorly served by ferries, could be saved" . South China Morning Post .
^ "List of Recognized Villages under the New Territories Small House Policy" (PDF) . Lands Department . September 2009.
^ Cheung, Sindney (2003). "Traditional dwellings, conservation and land use: A study of three villages in Sai Kung" (PDF) . Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong Branch . 43 : 10– 11. ISSN 1991-7295 .
^ Heaver, Stuart (27 February 2016). "The abandoned churches of Sai Kung: how Italian missionaries established Hakka congregations in Hong Kong" . South China Morning Post .
^ Historic Building Appraisal: Holy Family Chapel, Chek Keng, Tai Po, New Territories
^ Antiquities Advisory Board . List of the 1,444 Historic Buildings with Assessment Results Archived 2018-06-18 at the Wayback Machine
^ Hong Kong Youth Hostels Association: Bradbury Hall Archived September 7, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
^ Transport Department : Kaito Ferry Services
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to
Chek Keng .
22°25′17″N 114°21′00″E / 22.421462°N 114.350025°E / 22.421462; 114.350025