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(ENG) Unique history, culture, and ecology of Ping Che, Lin Ma Hang, and Sha Tau Kok, in Hong Kong

(ENG) Unique history, culture, and ecology of Ping Che, Lin Ma Hang, and Sha Tau Kok, in Hong Kong

Published 7 months, 1 week ago
Description

This extensive document details a proposed cultural tourism strategy for the former Frontier Closed Area in Hong Kong, encompassing the border regions of Ping Che, Lin Ma Hang, and Sha Tau Kok. It frames this area's unique history—shaped by its proximity to Shenzhen, its Hakka clan heritage, and long-term military isolation—as a "time capsule" of historical and ecological assets, ripe for high-quality tourism development under the Northern Metropolis plan. The core of the strategy focuses on five "hidden treasures," including the geo-political memory preserved at the MacIntosh Forts, the industrial and ecological significance of the Lin Ma Hang Lead Mine, and the cultural continuity embodied by the Sha Tau Kok Fish Lantern Dance. Ultimately, the source advocates for balancing economic development with strict ecological and heritage conservation, using specific examples like managing bat habitats in the mine and controlling visitor access through mandatory border permits and public transport restrictions to ensure a "low-density, high-quality" experience.



The Unwritten Pages of Yesterday 細 聽 長 風 說 舊 河

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