Street Suffix in Hong Kong, Mapped

Visualising and analysing the distribution of street names

Kenneth Wong
8 min readMay 29, 2020

TL;DR

I made an interactive web map and some print maps colouring the Chinese and English street suffixes in Hong Kong. I also made some charts analysing the relationship between Chinese and English street suffixes.

Overview of the interactive map application

NOTE: This article was first published in May 2020. In July 2021, I revised the web map and some images in the article.

How are the roads named?

Have you ever noticed the name of the streets you walk by every day? Specifically, what is the end word of the street name?

“Street” or “Lane”?

Street suffixes are the end words used to describe the characteristics of the streets. In Hong Kong, once a new street is officially named, the Lands Department will gazette a series of governmental notices to declare the street name and the exact location and alignments of that street like this one. The latest Notices and Plans for Street Naming are available in the Lands Department webpage.

Still, there are no laws for the government to follow how the streets should be named. The most relevant legislation related to street names is CAP132 s.111:

(1) Notwithstanding section 111B, the Authority, by declaration in the Gazette, may-

​ (a) assign a name to a street that has not been named; or
​ (b) change the name of a street that has been named.

Naming new streets are matters mostly related to Lands Department. After a new street is constructed, Lands Department will circulate the proposed street name to various governmental departments (Post, Home Affairs Department, etc.) for representations and comments. Once the District Council approves the proposed name, Lands Department takes the follow-up matters, including gazette and construction of road signs.

Workflow of street naming. from Annex II of Sha Tin District Council Committees Meetings Discussion Papers (Only Chinese version is available)

Though there are no laws on street naming, technical memorandums are still available. In 1950s/60s, the Urban Council published several documents about naming rules of streets and the translation between the Chinese and English street suffix. It is still used by Lands Department as a reference for street naming. Still, not many official documents are available about the choice of street suffix. The rules are, in the end, kind of de-facto.

How are the street suffixes chosen?

What are the de-facto standards and rules, then? In a District Council meeting about discussing street naming matters, Lands Department provided the following guidelines street suffix types:

i) Road (道/路) ──區域幹道或市區幹道。

ii) Street (街) ──地區幹道或次要道路,多有樓宇在旁。

iii) Path (徑) ──行人路或小路。

iv) Lane (里) ──通道,或樓宇之間短而狹窄的小路。

from Annex III of Sha Tin District Council Committees Meetings Discussion Papers (Only Chinese version is available)

We could roughly classify the street suffix according to the hierarchy of the roads.

Highway” has the highest hierarchy among all carriageways in Hong Kong. Highways are mainly expressways and in the route system.

Roads with the second level of the road hierarchy usually have names ended with “Road”, “Avenue” and “Drive”. These suffixes are reserved for major thoroughfares. They usually have 2–4 lanes (or more) and serve as the “trunk” and “backbone” roads of the transport system.

What comes next is “ Street”, which are usually residential roads. They are some living streets (yep, street) in local residential neighbourhoods. Part of these “Streets” are single lane road and packed with buildings on the two side of the road.

Finally, we have “ Path” and “ Lane”. These two suffixes mostly refer to local residential pathways, especially cul-de-sac with the only exit pointing towards the major “Road”/”Street” in the district.

These are the most common names you see when you wander in the city. Besides, there is a standard translation between the Chinese and the English suffix like below. The names, in general, follows「道路街徑里」- a common Chinese term grouping the street suffixes, according to their hierarchy.

  • 公路: Highway
  • 道/路: Road, Drive, Avenue
  • : Street
  • : Path
  • : Lane

This begs the old-but-gold question of geographers again:

Where are they, then?

Are they any spatial patterns we could observe about the suffix of the streets?

Transport Department provides a road network open database. After some data cleaning, the dataset includes in total 3,270 roads in Hong Kong. I then classified the Chinese street suffix into 7 types and English street suffix into 8 as below:

  • Chinese: 公路、道、路、街、徑、里、其他
  • English: Highway, Road, Drive, Avenue, Street, Path, Lane, Others

So, what are the spatial patterns of the street suffix? Let’s continue…

Maps, Interactive and Print

Below is a link to an interactive web map colouring the carriageways in Hong Kong by its Chinese and English street suffix.

https://arcg.is/bS5mX

The map on the left-hand side colours the street by their CHINESE street suffix, while the one on the right-hand side is coloured by ENGLISH street suffix. You can do some side-by-side comparisons with this application. When you click on any road, a pop-up showing the Chinese and English full name of that road will appear.

You can interactively click on the roads to check the full name of each road and their respective suffix.

If you are not fans of interactive maps, you can check the static print version of the roads below.

Basic Analysis

The story, of course, would not end by just colouring the streets. What insights do the maps give us? A starting point is always counting the total number of each category.

How many roads do we have for each CHINESE suffix?

The bar chart below shows the number of each Chinese Street Suffix. Each horizontal bar represents one street suffix type.

Without surprise,「街」 is the most common suffix among all roads, with 1350 thoroughfares falls into this category.「道」and「路」has relatively about the same number. There are 646 roads named 「道」 and 744 roads named 「路」. 110 Streets has the 「徑」 suffix and 216 belongs to「里」.

How many roads do we have for each ENGLISH suffix?

The bar chart showing the count of each English suffix type is shown below. Same as the one showing the Chinese suffix above, each horizontal bar represent one street suffix type.

Among the roads in Hong Kong, “Road” is the most common suffix. 1363 carriageways have (literally) a “Road” suffix. The second most common suffix is “Street”. 1329 thoroughfares has (again, literally) a “Street” suffix. Though drive and avenue are some common suffixes you can find in the urban area, only 34 and 53 thoroughfares are named with “Drive” and “Avenue” respectively.

What is the relationship between Chinese suffix and English suffix?

The above two are just some starters. Here is the real question when we want to dig deeper:

What are the differences between Chinese and English Suffix of the Roads?

Here, we classify the streets by both their Chinese and English street suffix. With 7 Chinese and 8 English street suffix groups, we have in total of 56 combinations to identify which group does each street belongs to. In the chart below, each row refers to one Chinese suffix category and each column refers to one English suffix. Therefore, each cell refers to each “Chinese and English suffix combination” of the road. The colour of each cell refers to the total number of roads falling into that combination. Darker colour implies a higher number of roads in that category.

Say, the dark purple cell on row 「街」 and column “Street” implies there are 1,327 thoroughfares have a Chinese Suffix of 「街」 and English Suffix of “Street”. The blueish-green cell on row 「道」 and column “Avenue” means there are 25 thoroughfares with Chinese Suffix of 「道」 and English Suffix of “Avenue”.

Immediately we could draw some interesting insights:

  • Majority of the 「公路」 does have an English Suffix of “Highway”; Instead, they are just called “Road”
  • Paths with the suffix of “Streets” mostly (as expected) has the Chinese suffix of 「街」
  • “Path” is mostly equivalent to 「徑」, while “Lane” has usually the same meaning as 「里」
  • “Drive” applies to both higher hierarchy roads of 「道/路」and lower hierarchy roads of 「徑」 at the same time

The fun (and chaotic) part is the difference between 「道」and「路」. These two characters are interchangeable in Chinese word sense. Even 「道路」 exactly means “road” in Chinese! Besides, the government assumes these two words are interchangeable. One direct observation is that 「道」 refers to roads in the urban area of Hong Kong Island and the Kowloon Peninsula. 「路」 refers to roads in New Territories, especially those in New Town. (Check the map again!)

But why the government named those in urban area differently than those in New Territories? That would be another story… probably a research topic for urban historians.

Hiatus

Streets are named by the government and the people. And street names are part of urban history. This somewhat implies the naming system is inevitably chaotic.

Still, when mapping things out, we can try to understand some of the basic patterns inside the chaos. Spatial data and maps are always the tools to help us effectively understand things happening in the cities. It does not need to be policy-related only. Things related to urban are spatial data, and you can always draw them out.

Hope you do you get semantic satiation to the words “street” and “road” after reading.

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Kenneth Wong

Urban Data Science Enthusiast | Urban Planning | GIS | Maps | Data Visualisation | mappyurbanist.com