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Contestants in Kerry Hong Kong Streetathon will get chance to run on Central Kowloon Bypass
Contestants in Kerry Hong Kong Streetathon will get chance to run on Central Kowloon Bypass

South China Morning Post

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • South China Morning Post

Contestants in Kerry Hong Kong Streetathon will get chance to run on Central Kowloon Bypass

Ten thousand local and overseas runners will get their chance to be among the first to run on the yet-to-open Central Kowloon Bypass (Yau Ma Tei section) when they compete in the Kerry Hong Kong Streetathon in November, organisers said on Thursday. The 10th anniversary of the Streetathon, which features a marathon and a half-marathon, will be held on November 23, with participants starting at the Island Eastern Corridor near East Coast Park. Runners will run on the HK$42.36 billion Central Kowloon Bypass, heading into Kowloon Bay and Kai Tak, before finishing at the Yau Ma Tei Interchange. Expected to be completed by December, the 4.7-kilometre Central Kowloon Bypass would see drivers needing only about five minutes to travel between Kowloon Bay and Yau Ma Tei. Public registration for the race opened today and will continue until the 20,000 quota – across seven categories – are snapped up. Registration fees range from HK$150 to HK$620 (US$19 to US$79). Apart from the marathon and half marathon, the Kerry Hong Kong Streetathon will also feature a 10-kilometre race, with runners going via the Tseung Kwan O Cross Bay Bridge and Tseung Kwan O-Lam Tin Tunnel.

Streetathon to use yet-to-open Central Kowloon Bypass
Streetathon to use yet-to-open Central Kowloon Bypass

RTHK

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • RTHK

Streetathon to use yet-to-open Central Kowloon Bypass

Streetathon to use yet-to-open Central Kowloon Bypass The event takes place on November 23 and features a city-centre marathon, a cross-harbour half-marathon and 10-kilometre races. Photo: RTHK People taking part in this year's Streetathon will get the chance to run along a brand-new artery connecting East and West Kowloon before it officially opens. The event, now in its tenth year, takes place on November 23 and features a city-centre marathon, a cross-harbour half-marathon and 10-kilometre races. Full and half marathon runners will start on the Island Eastern Corridor in Causeway Bay, before crossing the Eastern Harbour Crossing to Kowloon, running through to Kai Tak and Kowloon Bay and traversing the entire Yau Ma Tei section of the Central Kowloon Bypass to finish at the Yau Ma Tei Interchange. Andes Leung, CEO and co-founder of event organiser RunOurCity, said it will be a rare chance for runners to blaze along the brand-new bypass. "This time we can close both eastbound and westbound of the whole bypass so that we can have more time for set-up and for dismantling, so we can have more interesting activities or entertainment inside the bypass," he said. "Even though for next year or future years we may use the same bypass, it will not be the same because we cannot close both east and westbound I would say this is the only unique time for runners to join this." Leung said there will also be a separate 10-kilometre race for young entrants, to encourage full-time students aged between 12 and 25 to take up long-distance running. Public registration for the races opened on June 12, with 20,000 places available in total.

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