2 Best Sights in Hong Kong, China

Law Uk Folk Museum

Eastern

This restored Hakka house was once the home of the Law family, who arrived here from Guangdong in the mid-18th century. It's the perfect example of a triple-jian, double-lang residence. Jian are enclosed rooms—here, the bedroom, living room, and workroom at the back. The front storeroom and kitchen are the lang, where the walls don't reach up to the roof, and thus allow air in. Although the museum is small, informative texts outside and displays of rural furniture and farm implements inside give a powerful idea of what rural Hong Kong was like. It's definitely worth a trip to bustling industrial Chai Wan, at the eastern end of the MTR, to see it. Photos show what the area looked like in the 1930s—these days a leafy square is the only reminder of the woodlands and fields that once surrounded this buttermilk-color dwelling.

14 Kut Shing St., Hong Kong, n/a Hong Kong, Hong Kong
2896–7006
Sights Details
Rate Includes: Free, Closed Thurs., Fri.–Wed. 10–6

Museum of Coastal Defence

Eastern

The Lei Yue Mun Fort makes for an appropriate home for the Museum of Coastal Defence. The museum is in the redoubt, a high area of land overlooking the narrowest point of the harbor; you take an elevator and cross an aerial walkway to reach it. As well as the fascinating historical displays indoors, there's a historical trail complete with tunnels, cannons, and observation posts.

175 Tung Hei Rd., Hong Kong, n/a Hong Kong, Hong Kong
2569–1500
Sights Details
Rate Includes: HK$10; free Wed., Fri.–Wed. 10–5