Hongkong BusesThe double-decker buses that run around town are not fast (being subject to(frequent traffic snarl-ups) but are comfortable enough, especially now that most are air-conditioned. and they are essential for many destinations, suck served by trains. You pay as you board and exact change is required; the amount is often posted up on the timetables at bus stops and fares range from $1.20 to $45. The HKTB issues useful up-to-date information on bus routes, including the approximate length of journeys and cost. The main bus ter- minal in Central is at Exchange Square, a few minutes’ walk west of the Star Ferry Pier, though some buses also start from right outside the ferry termi- nal, or from the Outlying Islands Piers, west of the Star Ferry. In Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, the main bus terminal is right in front of the Star Ferry Terminal. As well as the big buses, there are also ubiquitous cream-coloured minibus- es and maxicabs that can be stopped almost anywhere on the street (not on double yellow lines), though these often have the destination written in Chinese only. They cost a little more than regular buses, and you usually pay the driver as you disembark; change - in small amounts - is only given on the minibuses (which have a red rather than a green stripe). The drivers of either are unlikely to speak English.

Add: A few important local bus routesHongkong Buses

From Central:
#6 and #6A to Stanley via Repulse Bay
#15 to the Peak
#70 to Aberdeen
#90 to Ocean Park

From Tsim Sha Tsui star Ferry:
#8A and #5C to Hung Hom station
#1and #lA to Mongkok
#6A to Lei Cheng Uk Han Tomb Museum
#1, #1A, #2, #6, #7 and #9 to Temple Street Night Market

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