10 things Hong Kong does better than anywhere else
April 22, 2014 -- Updated 0257 GMT (1057 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Hong Kong has 1,251 skyscrapers and high-rises, the most in the world
- Movie mogul Sir Run Run Shaw is credited with putting Hong Kong's martial arts movies on global screens
- Hong Kong has the lowest homicide rate of any major city in the world
Editor's note: Editor's
note: This story is part of a series highlighting superlatives of
countries and cities around the world. Click here for pieces on Italy, France, the United States, Canada, Taiwan, India and South Korea, and watch for upcoming installments featuring other countries.
(CNN) -- How can you not love Hong Kong?
Home of Bruce Lee, divine
dim sum, lofty buildings, loftier real estate prices and -- in spite of
all those buildings -- easy access to incredible stretches of great
outdoors.
It's been more than 15 years since the British handed Hong Kong over to Chinese rule but little has changed.
Hong Kong remains a competitive and independent city, consistently ranked as one of the world's best places to live.
But don't take our word for it.
Here are 10 things this great city does better than anywhere else.
1. Tonal talents
Native English speakers who've managed to learn Cantonese from scratch: give yourselves a pat on the back.
The language has a total of six to nine tones, depending on where you're hearing it, compared to English's zero tones.
No other Asian language comes close. (There are four tones in Mandarin, five in Thai and six in Vietnamese).
That's kind of like saying one English word can be pronounced six different ways and have at least six different meanings.
Locals like to say this makes us particularly good at music (certain karaoke sessions have proven otherwise) and studies have shown there's some truth to this.
To add to the complexity
-- and fun -- of the language, Cantonese is a dialect with new slang
invented everyday and many words aren't used in written communication.
Intimidated?
Check out Carlos Douh's YouTube channel, the Internet's most entertaining Cantonese language teacher, for quick and easy Cantonese lessons.
2. Staying alive
Don't wanna get murdered?
Come to Hong Kong!
The city not only has one of the lowest crime rates in the world, it ranks third in a list compiled by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime in 2011 of places with the least homicides.
Hong Kong -- with an
intentional homicide rate of 0.2 per 100,000 people in the last 16 years
-- only lost out to Monaco and Palau, where there have been zero
recorded murders.
When you consider that
Hong Kong has a population of more than 7 million crammed into a city of
1,104 square kilometers, while Monaco only has about 36,000 people and
idyllic island nation Palau about 20,000, Hong Kong definitely triumphs
as the safest city in the world.
3. Getting you there
Hong Kong is really good at getting you where you need to go.
The public transportation system is famous around the world for its efficiency and profitability, making Hong Kong one of the least car-dependent cities, with only about 710,000 registered vehicles.
In particular, the MTR
Corporation that operates Hong Kong's subway system is so good at what
they do they run other city's trains as well, including operating
sections of subway lines in Beijing, Hangzhou, Shenzhen, London and the
whole of Melbourne and Stockholm's underground networks.
4. Building into the sky
When you've got a heck of a lot of people and very little land, what do you do?
Hong Kong's solution is to stack them up on top of each other, inside tall buildings.
Once the city started doing it, it couldn't stop.
Hong Kong now has 1,251 skyscrapers and high-rises, the most in the world, creating a dramatic skyline.
There's the bamboo-like
Bank of China by renowned architect I.M. Pei and the 490-meter
International Commerce Centre (Hong Kong's tallest), the latter of which
will become a gigantic art piece at the hands of sound artist Carsten
Nicolai during Art Basel Hong Kong 2014.
Hong Kong's scaffolders dangle precariously on bits of bamboo.
5. Daredevil construction
Most of those
skyscrapers were built using bamboo scaffolding, an old craft that
involves tying long pieces of sturdy bamboo together to form a
freestanding grid structure for workmen to hang out on.
Daredevil scaffolders
dangling precariously on bits of bamboo suspended in midair, with a
small harness for support, are a common and heart-stopping sight in Hong
Kong's streets.
While most other cities are using steel and aluminium scaffolding, Hong Kong stands by bamboo, even establishing a licensing system through the Hong Kong Construction Industry Council.
There are now more than 1,700 bamboo scaffolders registered with the Construction Workers Registration Board.
6. Letting you keep your money
As a financial center that's historically been seen as the gateway to the Chinese market, Hong Kong is a great place to make money.
What truly sets it apart is that residents actually get to keep most of the money they earn.
With one of the lowest
salaries tax rates in the world, capped at 15-17% and no sales tax or
VAT, Hong Kong is an attractive place to work and play.
The profits tax rate is the same for foreign and local companies at a low 16.5% and there's no capital gains tax in Hong Kong.
That doesn't make the local government a charity case though.
Property and shares
trade keep the government flush -- Financial Secretary John Tsang
estimates an HK$12 billion surplus for this year.
Editor's note: An earlier version of this story incorrectly identified the salaries tax rate. The error has been corrected.
"Is that you, Bruce?"
7. Kung fu movies
Bruce Lee, Jackie Chan,
Chow Yun Fat, Maggie Cheung, John Woo, Wong Kar-wai ... the list of Hong
Kong's cinematic heavy hitters goes on.
For a relatively small
city (population 7 million) tucked away in a far corner of East Asia,
Hong Kong sure has produced a lot of Hollywood-worthy stars.
But it's the city's kung fu movies that are the most recognized.
"Enter the Dragon,"
"Fist of Fury," "Once Upon a Time in China," and "Drunken Master" are
just a few of the classics that come to mind.
Much of the city's
cinematic martial arts glory is due to the efforts of one legendary
movie mogul: Sir Run Run Shaw, who passed away at the age of 107 in
January.
Shaw put Hong Kong
movies on the map by inventing and popularizing kung fu genre films in
the 1970s and pushing co-productions such as "Blade Runner."
Before passing away he
admitted regretting never working with Bruce Lee, who was offered a
better deal by Shaw rival Golden Harvest.
8. Soft landings
One of the most impressive sites for Hong Kong visitors is the airport.
Most love the
efficiency, the fast connection to the city through the Airport Express,
and the frequent traveler system that allows jet setters to use a fast
lane through immigration.
The airport is one of
the most lauded in the world, winning nearly 40 awards from
international operations since it opened in 1998 and ranking atop
Skytrax's World's Best Airport list for eight years in a row.
Sure, it's recently been toppled from the throne by Singapore's Changi Airport.
But Hong Kong handles more passenger traffic, 53 million passengers in 2011.
Take that, Singapore.
9. Foodie-ism
Hong Kong: 7 million people, 15,000 restaurants.
This is a city of unashamedly camera-toting, food-blogging, lip-smacking gourmands.
And while we don't have the restaurant density of New York City, our diversity is staggering.
Foodies here will have lunch at a three Michelin star restaurant and dinner at a street-side dai pai dong hawker stall.
Our cha chaan teng
diners can whip up fantastical East-meets-West dishes, considered
sacrilegious anywhere else in the world -- ever tried a syrup-slathered
French toast filled with satay beef slices?
Or instant noodles dressed in a cheese sauce?
No? You haven't lived.
Take it from this city of people who are very good at eating.
10. Partying so hard the neighbors want in on it
First time visitors to
Hong Kong's party area, Lan Kwai Fong, might think they've entered a
time warp, suddenly appearing in Ibiza or Cancun at 9 p.m. on a Friday
night.
The area crams more than
100 bars, restaurants, clubs and shops into just a few short streets
(and in the high-rises along the streets), which themselves are nearly
always crammed with expats, flight attendants and other 9-to-5 refugees.
Neon lights blur into happy hour signs, which blur into fridges filled with garishly colored vodka jelly shots.
Come special events, such as the Rugby Sevens or New Year's Eve, the area gets ridiculously, lung-crushingly crowded.
Lankwaifong.com
claims it's "Hong Kong's premiere dining and entertainment
destination," which makes it sound somewhat more sophisticated than it
really is.
But for turning a
rubbish Tuesday workday into a heady, beery, feels-like-Friday evening,
where you're guaranteed to meet someone you know, there's no place like
it.
It's so successful that Chinese cities are asking Lan Kwai Fong Group to re-create the nightlife districts in their cities, namely Lan Kwai Fong Chengdu and Lan Kwai Fong Wuxi.
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