Cheung Tsing Highway

Route 3 shield}}
Cheung Tsing Highway
Part of Route 3
Route information
Maintained by Highways Department
Length1.2 km (0.75 mi)
Existed1997–present
Major junctions
Southeast endCheung Tsing Tunnel
Northwest endNorth West Tsing Yi Interchange
Location
CountryChina
Special administrative regionHong Kong
Highway system

Cheung Tsing Highway (Chinese: 長青公路; Cantonese Yale: chèuhng chīng gūng louh) is a highway of Route 3 between Cheung Tsing Tunnel and North West Tsing Yi Interchange [yue] on Tsing Yi Island, New Territories, Hong Kong. It was built as part of the Airport Core Programme together with the rest of Route 3 to provide a new highway link from North Western New Territories towards Hong Kong Island, and connects with Route 8 to provide access to the new Hong Kong International Airport.

It leads to Tsing Long Highway at North West Tsing Yi Interchange, and also connects to Lantau Link and Tsing Yi Road West [yue] there. Its eastern end leads into Cheung Tsing Tunnel which is connected to Tsing Kwai Highway by Cheung Tsing Bridge.

In the early morning of 30 November 2018, a coach ferrying workers to Hong Kong International Airport collided with a broken-down taxi on the highway, killing six people – the coach driver, the taxi driver and four of the coach passengers. The coach driver was suspected to have fallen asleep, and had previously been involved in two other early-morning coach accidents in 2018.[1][2] On 5 December, a memorial service for four of the victims was held at the accident site on the portion of Cheung Tsing Highway in Tsing Yi; the section of road was closed for two hours.[3]

  1. ^ Lo, Clifford (4 December 2018). "Coach driver involved in Tsing Yi crash dies of his injuries in hospital, says government spokeswoman". South China Morning Post. South China Morning Post Publishers. Retrieved 25 December 2018.
  2. ^ "Five dead, 31 injured in Hong Kong coach crash: police". Hindustan Times. HT Media. Agence France-Presse. 30 November 2018. Retrieved 25 December 2018.
  3. ^ Lo, Clifford (5 December 2018). "Driver of coach in fatal Tsing Yi crash had been involved in seven traffic violations in recent years". South China Morning Post. South China Morning Post Publishers. Retrieved 25 December 2018.