Lantau Island

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Lantau Island
Lantau Island - Hong Kong.svg
Lantau Island is highlighted in red.
Lantau Island
Geography
LocationSouthwest Hong Kong
Coordinates 22°16′14″N113°57′10″E / 22.27056°N 113.95278°E / 22.27056; 113.95278
Area147.16 km2 (56.82 sq mi)
Highest elevation934 m (3064 ft)
Highest point Lantau Peak
Administration
Hong Kong
Districts Islands District and Tsuen Wan District
Demographics
Population105,000 (2011)

Geography

Tung Chung New Town and Tung Chung Bay seen from the Ngong Ping 360 cableway Tung Chung overlook.jpg
Tung Chung New Town and Tung Chung Bay seen from the Ngong Ping 360 cableway
Miscanthus in Sunset Peak attract many people from November to January. Sunset Hill view 201511.jpg
Miscanthus in Sunset Peak attract many people from November to January.

With a land mass of 147.16 square kilometres (56.82 sq mi), Lantau is the largest island in Hong Kong, [1] almost twice the size of Hong Kong Island. Lantau Island primarily consists of mountainous terrain. Lantau Peak (934 metres (3,064 ft)) is the highest point of the island. [1] It is the second highest in Hong Kong, after Tai Mo Shan, and is almost twice the height of Victoria Peak. Other mountains include Sunset Peak (Tai Tung Shan) at 869 m (2,851 ft), Lin Fa Shan at 766 m (2,513 ft), Nei Lak Shan at 751 m (2,464 ft) and Yi Tung Shan at 747 m (2,451 ft).

Lantau Island is often referred to as "the lungs of Hong Kong", because of its abundance of indigenous forest and relative scarcity of high-rise residential developments which characterise Hong Kong Island and Kowloon. The largest country park of Hong Kong, Lantau South Country Park is located on the island, which hosts two other parks, namely Lantau North Country Park and its extension. These parks cover slightly more than half of the area of Lantau Island.

Shek Pik Reservoir is the third largest freshwater reservoir in Hong Kong. Completed in 1963, it covers an area of 1.01 km2 (0.4 sq mi) and has a capacity of 24,500,000 m3 (865,209,000 cu ft). [1]

Fan Lau Kok at the end of Fan Lau Peninsula is the southwest end of the territory of Hong Kong. The small island of Peaked Hill, off Tsin Yue Wan (煎魚灣), marks the westernmost point on the land of Hong Kong territories.

Population

Lantau Island has relatively low population density.[ citation needed ] Settlements are scattered throughout the island and each has its own distinctive characteristics. The completion of the Hong Kong International Airport at Chek Lap Kok in 1998 has led to economic development in north-western Lantau; the once quiet village of Tung Chung became a new town and is now home to over 45,000 people located in 30 to 50 storey high-rise housing estates and condominiums located near the airport. The neighbouring Yat Tung Estate houses 37,273 people, primarily in public housing. Over the next few years, the population of the North Lantau New Town is expected to increase to a target population of over 200,000 across 7.6 km2 (2.9 sq mi) of reclaimed land stretching from Tung Chung to Tai Ho Wan.[ citation needed ]

Discovery Bay

Discovery Bay is a privately owned residential development located on the south-eastern coast of Lantau. The district has a population of 20,271 residents from over 30 different countries, giving it a reputation as an expatriate enclave.

Drying fishes spread out on tables on the Lantau Island, Photographic slide by Joy Larkcom 1985 DM3195-1-2-1-6-001.jpg
Drying fishes spread out on tables on the Lantau Island, Photographic slide by Joy Larkcom 1985

Villages

Other settlements include Mui Wo, Tai O, Tong Fuk, Sha Lo Wan villages, Pui O villages, Luk Keng Village, Nim Shue Wan Village, Pak Mong, San Shek Wan and The Sea Ranch.

Etymology

Lantau Island
Lantau island full.jpg
Overall view of Lantau Island, seen from the southeast

References

  1. 1 2 3 Lands Department (February 2011), Hong Kong Geographic Data (PDF), retrieved 29 April 2011
  2. 黃家樑 (1 July 2014). 藏在古蹟裡的香港 (in Chinese). 三聯書店(香港)有限公司. ISBN   978-962-04-3532-4.
  3. 1 2 3 Siu, Anthony Kwok-kin (1989). "Tai Yu Shan from Chinese Historical Records" (PDF). Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong Branch. 29: 396. ISSN   1991-7295 . Retrieved 24 October 2014.
  4. 明崇禎曹學佺《大明一統名勝志》卷一廣州府新安縣條,參見:蕭國健(1995)「宋代的香港」《香港古代史》,香港:中華書局,第58頁
  5. 宋王象之《輿地紀勝》-{卷}-八十九,參見:蕭國健(1995)「宋代的香港」《香港古代史》,香港:中華書局,第58-70頁
  6. 徐承恩 (1 March 2016). 城邦舊事: 十二本書看香港本土史 (修訂版) (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Red Publish. ISBN   978-988-8380-38-1.
  7. Peter Borschberg, ed., Journal, Memorials and Letters of Cornelis Matelieff de Jonge. War, Diplomacy and Commerce in 17th-Century Southeast Asia, Singapore: NUS Press, 2015, https://www.academia.edu/4203783.
  8. "HK Maps".
  9. "HK Maps".
  10. Wood, Andrew. "The Silver Mine of Silver Mine Bay". The Industrial History of Hong Kong Group. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  11. Lantau Island, Po Lin Monastery, Big Buddha, Temple http://www.hong-kong-travel.org/Po-Lin-Monastery/
  12. Lantau Island Archived 22 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine Lantau Island
  13. Serious Hike: Sunset Peak on Lantau Island (Mui Wo/Pui O to Pak Kung Au) | hkfiles https://hkfiles.wordpress.com/2014/01/17/serious-hike-sunset-peak-on-lantau-island-mui-wopui-o-to-pak-kung-au/
  14. "Southwest Lantau Marine Park and Soko Islands Marine Park". Hong Kong Government Press Release. 1 September 2014. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  15. RTHK TV: Hong Kong Connection - 2016-4-17
  16. TVB - “Scoop” 25 March 2016
  17. "POA School Net 98" (PDF). Education Bureau . Retrieved 12 September 2022.
  18. "POA School Net 62" (PDF). Education Bureau . Retrieved 12 September 2022.
  19. "POA School Net 99" (PDF). Education Bureau . Retrieved 12 September 2022.
  20. "Declared interests from the Lantau Development Advisory Committee". South China Morning Post. 27 June 2014. p. C15.
  21. Fung, Fanny W.Y.; Cheung, Chi-fai (15 May 2014). "Government development adviser's family owns land on Lantau". South China Morning Post. p. C4.
  22. Nip, Amy (9 March 2014). "Development in Lantau country parks not ruled out, Paul Chan says". South China Morning Post.
  23. 1 2 3 4 Ng, Kang-chung (11 January 2015). "Disneyland expansion part of massive Lantau land reclamation project to house 700,000 more by 2030". South China Morning Post.
  24. "Lantau panel suggestions spark worries about ecological impact". Hong Kong Economic Journal. 11 January 2015.
  25. "Lantau dev't office to be formed". Hong Kong Government. 13 January 2016.
Lantau Island
Traditional Chinese 爛頭
Simplified Chinese 烂头
Cantonese Yale Laahn tàuh
Jyutping laan6 tau4
Literal meaningRotten Head
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyin Làntóu
Yue: Cantonese
Yale Romanization Laahn tàuh
Jyutping laan6 tau4