
In Hong Kong, delivery apps once took on a different – more physical
Vertical-living realities significantly affect everyday life when ground-level access becomes problematic and daily necessities must be obtained from several hundred metres up. During the long years of Covid-19 restrictions, a wide variety of
app-based delivery platforms proliferated across Hong Kong. But while technology has transformed such services today, similar levels of daily convenience were enjoyed here a century ago.
A delivery man carries a bag of takeaway food during lunch hour in Causeway Bay. Photo: Eugene Lee
Here's an unlikely question to keep in reserve for quiz nights, or an awkward dinner party conversational pause: until well into the 1950s, what retail characteristic did urban Hong Kong's oldest residential areas share with ancient Rome, Aleppo and Carthage, medieval Paris, London and York, and parts of present-day Kolkata, Delhi and Yangon?
A hint; in locations like the backstreets in Central, Western, Wan Chai and Yau Ma Tei, tenement buildings were closely packed together, clustered along narrow streets and lanes, and typically ranged from a few storeys high to several. And remember, none of these structures had lifts.
The answer? Such residents could take advantage of an astonishing variety of delivery services without ever needing to go downstairs. In all these places, tenement households kept handy a wicker basket on an appropriate length of rope near their open balconies and windows for purchases from
passing hawkers
Pre-war buildings at Li Chit Street, Wan Chai. Photo: SCMP Archives
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Standard
3 days ago
- The Standard
In Hiroshima, a schoolboy keeps memories of war alive with guided tours
Shun Sasaki, 12, an elementary school student in Hiroshima, guides foreign visitors in English as a volunteer guide in front of the Atomic Bomb Dome in Hiroshima, western Japan July 15, 2025. REUTERS/Issei Kato


South China Morning Post
3 days ago
- South China Morning Post
China boy, 3, survives 18-floor plunge; dad honours ‘life-saving tree' with big red flower
A three-year-old boy in China has shocked the nation after he miraculously survived an 18-storey fall from his residential building, thanks to a tree that broke his fall. Advertisement As a mark of gratitude, the boy's father later adorned the tree with a large red flower. The incident unfolded on July 15 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, southeastern China, when the unidentified toddler was left in the care of his grandparents. The toddler was found lying on the ground by a resident who was passing by. Photo: Beijing News Believing the child was asleep, the grandparents briefly left home to buy groceries, locking the door of the flat to prevent him from wandering. However, the boy woke up and made his way into the bathroom. The bathroom window had no safety bars, so he was able to climb onto the toilet and then to the window, from which he fell. Advertisement Miraculously, his plunge was broken by a tree and he survived. The boy was found on the ground by a resident who recorded a video and shared it with the property management group.

South China Morning Post
3 days ago
- South China Morning Post
GSIS graduates excel in final exams
[The content of this article has been produced by our advertising partner.] Members of this year's graduating class at German Swiss International School (GSIS) achieved an impressive set of results in their final exams and are now preparing to take up hard-won places at some of the world's leading universities. With the school offering two distinct curriculums, 12 students in the German International Stream (GIS), who work towards the Deutsches Internationales Abitur (DIA), achieved an outstanding average score of 1.8. Most remarkably, one 16-year-old student, Samuel Cheung, was awarded a perfect Abitur score of 1.0, in the process becoming the youngest ever DIA graduate counterparts in the English International Stream (EIS), who follow the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme (IBDP), were similarly successful. Among a 68-strong cohort, all of whom passed the exams, seven students, Edith Chan, Emily Chen, Maxwell Leung, Michael Tay, Nadia Venetz, Rachael Ng and Tarama Loges, attained a maximum IB score of 45 points. In total, 51 students got 40 points or more, and six bilingual diplomas were awarded, two of them in English-German and the remaining four in English-Mandarin Chinese. 'We could not be any prouder of our students, whose outstanding results are testament to their ongoing commitment, incredibly hard work, and striving for excellence,' says GSIS principal Alexandra Freigang-Krause. 'Excellence comes in many forms and as a school we take pride in the achievements of all our students and celebrate their unique strengths and talents.' Much of the success, of course, is down to the school's commitment to academic excellence and engagement. This is supported by a well-coordinated programme which guides students on key approaches to learning, helping to maintain motivation, understand essential concepts, and undertake independent study.