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Louis Koo Cinema, Hong Kong Arts Centre, renamed in 2018, a cosy cinema with 119 seats; L Cinema, on Mong Lung Street, Shau Kei Wan; opened on 8 February 2016 [27] Lux Theatre, on Bulkeley Street, Hung Hom; opened in 1971 [28] The Metroplex, at Kowloonbay International Trade & Exhibition Centre, Kowloon Bay; opened on 14 February 2014 [29]
Queen Elizabeth Hospital was officially opened on 6 September 1963 by then Governor of Hong Kong, Robert Black. At the time, it was the largest general hospital in the British Commonwealth, built at a cost of HK$70,300,000. [4] Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh laid the hospital's foundation stone on 7 March 1959. [5] The hospital is now the ...
Government Civil Hospital, c. 1849 –1937; Sai Ying Pun Hospital 1937–1978; Lock Hospital, 1858–1894 – venereal diseases hospital; Cheung Chau Fong Bin Hospital, 1872–1988; Royal Naval Hospital, 1873–1949; British Military Hospital, Hong Kong, 1907–1996; Lai Chi Kok Hospital, 1938–2004; Hong Kong Central Hospital, 1966–2012
B: Queen Elizabeth Hospital B1: Novotel Nathan Road Kowloon Hong Kong / Chung Hing Hotel / Eaton Hotel ; B2: Diocesan Girls' School / Queen Elizabeth Hospital; C: Bowring Street C1: Austin Road, Kowloon Park, Kowloon Park Sports Centre, Kowloon Park Swimming Pool, Tsim Sha Tsui Polise Station, Park Lane Shopper's Boulevard
Kowloon Hospital is a general care hospital located in Kowloon City District, [2] in Kowloon, Hong Kong. The complex was built on land between Argyle Street and Prince Edward Road . The hospital used to be an acute hospital with accident and emergency service.
The Kowloon Central Cluster (Chinese: 九龍中醫院聯網) is one of the seven hospital clusters managed by Hospital Authority in Hong Kong.It consists of nine public hospitals, one institutions and thirteen general outpatient clinics to provide public healthcare services for the population of Yau Ma Tei, Mong Kok, Tsim Sha Tsui and Kowloon City and Wong Tai Sin.
The hill north hosts a meteorological station of the Hong Kong Observatory, the Blood Transfusion Centre of Hong Kong Red Cross and the Queen Elizabeth Hospital. From 1967 until June 1995, the 15-storey British Military Hospital (BMH) was also based in the area, on a site to the east of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital.
The Queen Elizabeth Stadium is an indoor sport facility on the Morrison Hill in Wan Chai, on the Hong Kong Island of Hong Kong. First opened in 1980, it has a 3,500-seat arena , gymnasia, squash and badminton courts, and a multi-purpose hall.