Mo Tat

Coordinates: 22°12′28.4″N 114°8′43.42″E / 22.207889°N 114.1453944°E / 22.207889; 114.1453944
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Mo Tat Wan in April 2021
Mo Tat Wan in August 2010
Mo Tat Wan Pier in May 2009

Mo Tat (Chinese: 模達) is a small village in the southern part of Lamma Island, Hong Kong, on the spur of land that juts east and faces Aberdeen. The village is composed of three different areas: Mo Tat Wan (模達灣) along the beach, Mo Tat Sun Tsuen (模達新村; 'Mo Tat New Village') on the hill and Mo Tat or Mo Tat Old Village (模達舊村) in the valley.

The village has no shops or commercial centre, although there is a restaurant near the ferry pier.

Administration[edit]

Mo Tat and Mo Tat Wan are recognized villages under the New Territories Small House Policy.[1]

Rejected luxury real estate plan[edit]

Mainland China-based Agile Property Holdings had proposed in 2011 a private luxury development with a large 500-yacht marina, one 120-room hotel, 900 upmarket residential units across Tung O Wan to the northern part of the bay. The size of this rejected project was to be equal to 125 standard football fields.[2]

The development site boundary would only have been 200 to 300 metres away from Sham Wan, a nesting ground for the endangered green turtle in the south of Lamma which is listed by the government as a "site of special scientific interest" with restricted entry. Alan Leung Sze-lun, senior conservation officer for WWF Hong Kong, said his group was very worried about the project's impact on the endangered species.[3]

Transport[edit]

There is a public ferry running between Aberdeen and Sok Kwu Wan via Mo Tat operated by Chuen Kee Ferry.[4][5] Ferries run to Central from Sok Kwu Wan, a village also 20 minutes by foot from Mo Tat.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "List of Recognized Villages under the New Territories Small House Policy" (PDF). Lands Department. September 2009.
  2. ^ 香港01評論 (2018-08-25). "南丫之南乏人問津 僅40常住居民 模達灣村民:就是想與世隔絕|01周報". 香港01 (in Chinese (Hong Kong)). Retrieved 2020-06-03.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ SCMP: Bid for luxury project on Lamma revived Archived 2012-07-18 at archive.today South China Morning Post Mar 14 2011
  4. ^ "Chuen Kee Ferry Ltd". Chuen Kee Ferry. Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  5. ^ "Franchised and Licensed Ferry Service Details". Transport Department. Retrieved 28 June 2021.

External links[edit]

22°12′28.4″N 114°8′43.42″E / 22.207889°N 114.1453944°E / 22.207889; 114.1453944