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Cotai Water Jet (Chinese: 金光飛航; Portuguese: Jacto de Água Cotai) is a company that operates high-speed ferry services between Macau and Hong Kong.It is one of the two companies operating high-speed ferry services between the two territories – the other one being TurboJET.
The Hong Kong–Macau Ferry Terminal is a ferry terminal and heliport, centrally located in Hong Kong. It is also known as the Macau Ferry Terminal, the Hong Kong-Macau Ferry Pier or the Shun Tak Heliport, and has an ICAO code of VHST. [1] The terminal is one of the several in Hong Kong that provide ferry services to Macau and cities in ...
The Central (Macau Ferry) Bus Terminus (Chinese: 中環(港澳碼頭)巴士總站) is a major bus terminus located in Sheung Wan, Central and Western District, Hong Kong, next to the Hong Kong–Macau Ferry Terminal.
Shun Tak Centre (Chinese: 信德中心; Jyutping: seon3 dak1 zung1 sam1) is a commercial and transport complex on the northern shore of Hong Kong Island in Sheung Wan, Hong Kong. It comprises a 4-storey podium containing a shopping centre and car park, two 38-storey office towers, and the Hong Kong–Macau Ferry Terminal .
Ferries take approximately 1 hour in the high-speed vessels. In 2011, Turbojet bought out ferry rival New World First Ferry, operating a ferry service between Macau and Kowloon, Hong Kong (China Ferry Terminal in Tsim Sha Tsui). Cotai Jet operates a daily route between this pier and Hong Kong–Macau Ferry Pier, Hong Kong located at Shun Tak ...
In nearby Hong Kong, about 1 million visitors had descended on the financial hub over the period from Sept. 29 to Wednesday, during which 1.4 million residents left, immigration data shows.
The Beijing–Hong Kong and Macau Expressway (Chinese: 北京-港澳高速公路), designated as G4 and commonly referred to as the Jinggang'ao Expressway (Chinese: 京港澳高速公路) is a 2,272.65 km (1,412.16 mi)-long expressway [1] that connects the Chinese cities of Beijing and Shenzhen, in Guangdong province, at the border of Hong Kong.
Over 150 sea-crossing services are scheduled daily between Macau and Hong Kong, [6] and the Outer Harbour Ferry Terminal serves as the major terminal for Macau's passenger traffic by sea. The route is served by high speed catamarans (with passenger capacity of about 400) and jetfoils (with passenger capacity of about 260) and the journey takes ...