Thursday, July 11, 2013

Hong Kong Amazing Museums

By Georgina Straits


Hong Kong museums represent a wide piece of Hong Kong life and culture that starts about 400 million years ago. The city's museums are devoted to many subjects, with history a thread that sews them all together. All of the main museums in HK are controlled by the city's Leisure and Cultural Services Office.

Hong Kong Museum of History

The Hong Kong Museum of History, one of the premier museums in HK, allows visitors to study 400 million years of history in only a few hours. The museum's permanent exhibit, the Hong Kong Story, spreads eight exhibits from the Devonian period to the 1997 hand-over from Britain to China, over 2 floors. This piece de resistance includes 4,000 items on show, 53 multi-media programs and more than 750 panels, all with special effects. Museum staff say this exhibit may be seen in 2 hours for those pressed for time, but counsel visitors permit at least 4 hours for the "meal deal" as well as transient displays.

Hong Kong Science Museum

Another one of the great museums in Hong Kong, the Hong Kong Science Museum is great fun for families. The museum has more than 500 science-related exhibitions, of which almost 70 % are interactive, providing an entertaining way for youngsters of all ages to learn about science. Since it opened in 1991, the museum's star attraction is the Energy Machine, a four-story high machine that demonstrates energy conversion as balls move down towers in the structure, the largest of it's type internationally. In the meantime, varied demonstrations on topics such as molecular gastronomy, synthesised clouds and liquid nitrogen occur daily throughout the museum.

Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Museum

The museum respecting Doctor. Sun Yat-Sen is amongst the smaller HK museums, but that does not lessen its seriousness. Doctor. Sun was a revolutionary who was pivotal in overthrowing the Qing Dynasty that ruled China from Beijing. As a consequence, this Hong Kong-educated man became the first president of the Republic of China. The museum offers a detailed look at Dr. Sun's life as well as the role Hong Kong played in this early 20th century revolution in China.

Museum of Tea Ware

Tea drinkers won't wish to miss the Flagstaff House Museum of Tea Ware, a small museum in central Hong Kong that is housed in an 1840s house built for the commander of British forces in the colony. Located within Hong Kong Park, the museum offers an extraordinary collection of tea pots, tea cups and other accessories, all devoted to this most UK and Asian of beverages. A collection of tea ware from Yixing is a highlight of the collection; Yixing tea ware is made from a special purple clay found only in Yixing County, and is regarded as a very high grade of tea ware. Visitors also will learn all about the history of tea, as well as view a set of Chinese ceramics and seals.




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