History ticks among towers
IIN the tall, small and ultra-modern city of Hong Kong, it is sometimes easy to overlook the tiny fragments of history that still survive today. Many of these were the most important and identifiable landmarks of their day.
The pier in Tsim Sha Tsui was such a place 100 years ago. In fact, it was the only arrival point for visitors to Hong Kong.
The Cultural Centre now dominates the landscape with its windowless walls onto one of the most dynamic harbour views in the world.
But it wasn't always like that. See the clock tower. It's now dwarfed by the buildings around it, but it used to be the tallest structure in Tsim Sha Tsui. It's all that is left of the Kowloon-Canton Railway building which was opened on October 1, 1910.
Imagine a time when people did not travel by aeroplane. The Wright brothers only made their first flight in 1908, so most long-distance transport was by steam train or boat.
There was a train that travelled all the way from London to Hong Kong. It must have been a very interesting trip at that time, although it was perhaps hot in places without overhead fans or air conditioning.