Current location - Recipe Complete Network - Diet recipes - Which MTR station exit is Mongkok Sneaker Street (Fa Yuen Street) in Hong Kong?
Which MTR station exit is Mongkok Sneaker Street (Fa Yuen Street) in Hong Kong?

Mongkok Sneaker Street, commonly known as "Women's Street", is formally known as "Tung Choi Street". Visitors can take the MTR to Mongkok Station, and then take Exit E, Bank Center, and then walk straight through Shantung Street to the third street corner, where you will see rows of sneaker stores, which will take about 3 minutes.

As for Fa Yuen Street, it's actually in Prince Edward, near what is commonly known as "Goldfish Street" (or formally known as "Bute Street"). The MTR Prince Edward Station - Union Square exit, and then you can ask the passers-by if you can't find it.

Shoe Street

Shoe Street is the common name for the section of Garden Street between Dundas Street and Argyle Street in Hong Kong, which is located in the Yau Tsim Mong district of Kowloon, and is one of the sightseeing and shopping destinations in Mong Kok. The entire section of the street is about 500 meters long, with about 150 stores selling sports shoes and sporting goods. The street is named after the Cantonese term for sports shoes.

Shoes Street began to develop in the 1980s as a result of the sportswear boom in Hong Kong, and has gradually become a distinctive shopping area. According to industry insiders, the stores are run by five major operators as a chain, with Yun Kee Sports Products owning more than 10 stores.

Under the oligopoly, the retail price of sporting goods sold there is disguised as a uniform price.

Features:

Sports stores, totaling more than 40 ****, are located one after the other on Sneaker Street in the heart of Mongkok, which is naturally packed with people day and night.

Many of the stores will have people from foreign countries to buy the most popular new shoes back, so as long as it is published in magazines, and even Hong Kong has not been represented by the style, can be found here, the Hong Kong people generally call these goods for "parallel imports".