Pok Fu Lam

Pok Fu Lam
Overlooking Pok Fu Lam and Lamma Island from High West
Chinese
Cantonese YaleBohkfùhlàhm
Literal meaning"Thin Shielding Forest"
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinBófúlín
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationBohkfùhlàhm
JyutpingBok6fu4lam4
IPA[pɔ̀ːk̚.fȕː.lɐ̏m]
Old cowsheds of the dairy farm

Pok Fu Lam (薄扶林) or Pokfulam is a residential area on Hong Kong Island, at the western end of the Southern District. It is a valley between Victoria Peak and Mount Kellett, around Telegraph Bay.

Pok Fu Lam can claim several firsts in the history of Hong Kong: It was the place where Hong Kong's floral emblem, Bauhinia blakeana, was first discovered; the site for Hong Kong's first reservoir, Pok Fu Lam Reservoir (1883, now part of a country park), and the site for Hong Kong's first dairy farm by five investors, including Sir Patrick Manson in 1885. The farm supplied not only milk, but cattle to Hong Kong, and later became Dairy Farm. However, it no longer exists in Pok Fu Lam.

Pok Fu Lam is connected to Lung Fu Shan, Sai Ying Pun and Aberdeen by the Pok Fu Lam Road. It's also indirectly connected to the Mid-Levels. Pok Fu Lam also overlooks Lamma Island. Pok Fu Lam is connected to Kennedy Town via Smithfield and Shek Tong Tsui via Hill Road.