Hong Kong’s handcarts keep the city on a roll
It’s a simple contraption – an iron frame, foldout handle and four rubber wheels – but in Hong Kong the old-fashioned handcart is what keeps the city rolling.

It’s a simple contraption – an iron frame, foldout handle and four rubber wheels – but in Hong Kong the old-fashioned handcart is what keeps the city rolling.
In the shadow of skyscrapers, Hong Kong’s working class trolley pushers transport everything from crates of live seafood to appliances, financial documents, furniture and mail.
But among the street cleaners, market traders and removal men, it is probably the city’s elderly scavengers who best highlight how vital handcarts are to the city.
Lee Cheung-Ho, 78, spends all day pushing her cart, and says she even goes out when there is a typhoon.
“I have to go out and make a living,” she said without stopping. “It helps even if I can only earn a few dollars.”