Sam Shing Temple (三聖廟) [1921- ]
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Sam Shing Temple (also known in Chinese as just Shing Temple 聖廟).
Built between 1914 and 1921 and now a Grade 2 listed building.
Sam Shing Temple (also known in Chinese as just Shing Temple 聖廟).
Built between 1914 and 1921 and now a Grade 2 listed building.
A tentative pin on Castle Peak Road at San Hui, Tuen Mun, near to the turn off for the Look (Luk) Yuen Hotel
Hi There
This is what's left of the gateway of a private estate. Likely to have a wall surrounding the property. Now being used as a landmark in a public park at the location.
T
From Wikipedia:
The Tai Hing Estate (Chinese: 大興邨) is the second public housing estate and the oldest existing public housing estate in Tuen Mun, New Territories, Hong Kong. There are 8,602 flats on the estate with capacity to house 21,100 people.
The site was previously farms near the coastline of Castle Peak Bay before the land reclamation of the bay for the construction of Tuen Mun New Town.
The marker is marked based on the GPS coordinates of the Trigoman's Castle Peak 517m Trigo Station. If there are errors they are entirely mine. Thanks should be made to JW and his gang for the location and theory of this site, together with the Shek Lung Kung site.
The location is documented in 新安縣誌﹐ and some other documents. The discussions of JW and his gang concerning this Beacon and others could be located here. The discussions are generally in Chinese.
The place mark is an approximation of the entrance, based on the Wiki entry, saying Perowne Barracks was on the other side of Castle Peak Road, opposite Gordon Hard. It's present day location is occupied by the Immigration Training Acadamy as well as the construction site of the Chu Hai Collage, a football field up in the hill, and some re-developments there.
Folks,
Walked from Gold Coast Beach through Castle Peak Beach earlier today and found the buildings of Gordon Hard more or less intact, right on Old Cafeteria Beach.
There is a ramp going down to the beach. Two giant cast iron rings are found on each side of the ramp, like those on Mount Davis. Maybe the military used those the haul heavy equipment to and from the water back then?
Best Regards,
T
The tag is just an approximate location. I have not been to that location for nearly forty years so it practically a blank to me.
T