Lai Chi Kok station

Last updated

Lai Chi Kok

茘枝角
Lai Chi Kok Station platforms 2022 05 part1.jpg
Platform 1
Chinese name
Chinese 茘枝角
Cantonese Yale Laihjīgok
Literal meaning Lychee Corner
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyin Lìzhījiǎo
Yue: Cantonese
Yale Romanization Laihjīgok
Jyutping Lai6zi1gok3
General information
Location Cheung Sha Wan Road near Cheung Sha Wan Plaza, Cheung Sha Wan
Sham Shui Po District
Hong Kong
Coordinates 22°20′14″N114°08′54″E / 22.3373°N 114.1482°E / 22.3373; 114.1482
Owned by MTR Corporation
Operated byMTR Corporation
Line(s) Tsuen Wan line
Platforms2 (1 island platform)
Tracks2
Connections
Construction
Structure typeUnderground
Platform levels1
AccessibleYes
Other information
Station codeLCK
History
Opened17 May 1982;43 years ago (1982-05-17)
Previous namesCheung Sha Wan
Services
Preceding station HK MTR logo.svg MTR Following station
Cheung Sha Wan
towards Central
Tsuen Wan line Mei Foo
towards Tsuen Wan
Track layout
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1
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2
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Location
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Station icon MTR.svg
Lai Chi Kok
Location within the MTR system

Lai Chi Kok (Chinese :茘枝角) is an MTR station on the Tsuen Wan line. It is located under Cheung Sha Wan Road. It was opened on 17 May 1982. The station's lineage is Vermilion.

Contents

Although the station is called Lai Chi Kok, it is located in Cheung Sha Wan. Passengers can use this station to access the western and southern part of Cheung Sha Wan. Western Cheung Sha Wan used to be an industrial area, but in recent years, several residential developments have been built on the reclaimed land, namely Banyan Garden, Liberté, The Pacifica, Aqua Marine, and Hoi Lai Estate. There is a pedestrian subway to connect these developments.

In addition, industrial buildings are being demolished and being rebuilt into brand new commercial buildings. The re-purposing of industrial units into office and retail units has led to the station having a high stream of passengers during peak hours.

The Chinese name of the station does not use the commonly used character , but the character instead, which is the correct one according to the Kangxi dictionary . The same is true for Lai King station.

History

On 10 May 1982, Tsuen Wan line opened to the public, but Lai Chi Kok station did not open until 17 May, a week after. The station was built by Kumagai Gumi.

Station layout

GGround levelExits, transport interchange
L1ConcourseCustomer Service centre, MTRShops (7-Eleven, Circle K, Hung Fook Tong, Maxim's Catering, Travel Expert, Pako's, I & m's, etc.)
Hang Seng Bank, vending machine, ATMs
Octopus promotion machine
L2
Platforms
Platform 2      Tsuen Wan line towards Central (Cheung Sha Wan)
Island platform, doors will open on the right
Platform 1     Tsuen Wan line towards Tsuen Wan (Mei Foo)
Lai Chi Kok Station Concourse HK MTR Lai Chi Kok Station Concourse.jpg
Lai Chi Kok Station Concourse
Lai Chi Kok Station Concourse Lai Chi Kok Station concourse 2022 05 part1.jpg
Lai Chi Kok Station Concourse

[1]

Colour

The station's colour is orange-red because of the bright red colour of the fruit after which the district is named. [2]

Entrances/Exits

References

  1. "Lai Chi Kok Station layout" (PDF). MTR Corporation . Retrieved 30 July 2014.
  2. Ben Pang (17 November 2016). "Why are Hong Kong's MTR stations different colours? Central is red for a reason, and why Prince Edward is purple might surprise you". South China Morning Post.
  3. "Lai Chi Kok Station street map" (PDF). MTR Corporation . Retrieved 30 July 2014.