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Tsuen Wan Chinese Permanent Cemetery

Cemeteries in Hong KongKwai Chung
Tsuen Wan Chinese Permanent Cemetery
Tsuen Wan Chinese Permanent Cemetery

Tsuen Wan Chinese Permanent Cemetery (Chinese: 荃灣華人永遠墳場) is a cemetery in Kwai Chung, Hong Kong located adjacent to the Kwai Chung Public Mortuary. It is managed by The Board of Management of the Chinese Permanent Cemeteries (Chinese: 華人永遠墳場管理委員會). It is the second Chinese permanent cemetery in Hong Kong after Aberdeen Chinese Permanent Cemetery and it lies on the slopes between Riviera Gardens and Tsuen Wan Abattoir, facing Gin Drinkers Bay and Rambler Channel. In terms of administrative divisions, Tsuen Wan District and Kwai Tsing District are bounded by Texaco Road and Tsing Tsuen Bridge. The cemetery is located to the south of the boundary line, so it belongs to Kwai Tsing District.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Tsuen Wan Chinese Permanent Cemetery (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Tsuen Wan Chinese Permanent Cemetery
Wing Lap Street,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

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N 22.359168 ° E 114.11634 °
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葵涌火葬場 Kwai Chung Crematorium

Wing Lap Street
, Ha Kwai Chung
Hong Kong, China
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Tsuen Wan Chinese Permanent Cemetery
Tsuen Wan Chinese Permanent Cemetery
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Kwai Chung Park
Kwai Chung Park

Kwai Chung Park is a public park currently under construction in Hong Kong. It is located in the southern part of Kwai Chung, within the Kwai Tsing District of the New Territories, on the site of the former Gin Drinkers Bay landfill, which was decommissioned in 1979. The park is connected to the nearby Kwai Shing Estate by a pedestrian bridge. Plans to transform the landfill into a major town park date back to the 1980s under the British Hong Kong administration. However, just as the project neared completion, the discovery of methane on-site forced authorities to indefinitely postpone its opening. In 2009, a 3.9-hectare section of the site was repurposed as the Hong Kong Jockey Club International BMX Park, which saw only limited public use before being closed in 2010. This area is expected to form the first phase of the park when it reopens. The remainder of the landfill has largely been left abandoned, drawing widespread public concern and criticism. The site was cited twice in reports by the Audit Commission for mismanagement. It wasn’t until 2018 that part of the area was finally developed into a temporary cricket ground. If the entire landfill is eventually incorporated into the park, Kwai Chung Park would span approximately 27 hectares, making it the largest park in Hong Kong—larger than both the completed Tai Po Waterfront Park and the under-construction Metro Park in the Kai Tak Development Area of East Kowloon.