Lam Tin station

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use Hong Kong English Template:Infobox station

Lam Tin (Template:Zh) is a station on the Hong Kong MTR Template:Lnl built as a part of the extension to Template:STN. The station is linked to the nearby hillside community of Lam Tin by a series of escalators.

HistoryEdit

In the 1980s, the Eastern Harbour Crossing (EHC or EHT) was planned by the colonial government. Following the successful performance of the MTR since 1978, the government decided to extend the Template:Lnl through a new tunnel to Template:STN.

It was later decided that before the entrance to the tunnel, trains would stop at a station in the Lam Tin Valley, where it goes into the Sai Tso Wan Hill and then underground to the entrance of the tunnel.

The station was opened on 1 October 1989. As part of his official visit to Hong Kong with Princess Diana, the Prince of Wales Charles (now Charles III) officiated the opening of the station, where a commemorative plaque remains on display.

After the opening of the EHC, Lam Tin, with the MTR station and bus terminals, became a crucial transport interchange in east Kowloon. The station serves passengers between Template:STN and other parts of Kowloon, as well as between Hong Kong and Kowloon.

Platform screen doors have been in use since late August 2005.

The EHC has now been taken over by the Template:Lnl running from Template:STN/Template:STN to Template:STN. Passengers wanting to take the EHC from the Kwun Tong line now have to change trains at Template:STN.

Station layoutEdit

File:Lam Tin Station 2014 04 part3.JPG
Lam Tin station concourse
File:Lam Tin MTR CSC.jpg
Customer service centre with only one operator serving both queues

Platforms 1 and 2 share the same island platform. Like Lai King station, Lam Tin station is built on an elevated platform, in which half of the platform is immersed into the Lam Tin Hill<ref>Hong Kong Guide 2004, HKSAR Government, February 2004.</ref><ref>Hong Kong Guide 2005, HKSAR Government, April 2005.</ref> and so the station is sealed like other underground stations (but it is mixed as an elevated, ground level, and underground station).

The concourse is the first floor down the escalators from the hillside exits. It is divided into two parts: the paid area and the non-paid area. The paid area has escalators down to the platforms and has a postbox, while the non-paid area links the exits and houses a Hang Seng Bank branch.

Between the paid and non-paid areas there are the entrance gates and a customer service centre which serves both areas.

- Subway
(Kai Tin Road)
Subway to Kai Tin Road and Lam Tin North
G Concourse Exits, footbridges
Customer service, MTRshops
Hang Seng Bank, vending machines, automatic teller machines
Footbridge Footbridge to Sceneway Garden
Transport interchange, subway to Kai Tin Road
L1
Platforms
Platform 1 Template:0 Template:Rcb towards Template:STN (Template:STN)

Template:0 Template:Rcb towards Template:STN (Former service) (Template:STN)

Island platform, doors will open on the right
Platform 2 Template:Rcb Kwun Tong line towards Template:STN (Template:STN)

<ref>Template:MTRsource</ref>

Entrances/exitsEdit

The station offers, on a trial basis, an accessible car service for passengers using wheelchairs. On demand, the service will transport the passengers from either exit A or D1 to exit C, which is accessible.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Transport connectionsEdit

Template:See also

Following the MTR station's opening in 1989, the area around Lam Tin station has been developed into a major transportation interchange in Hong Kong. The shopping centre and Sceneway Plaza above the transportation interchange adjacent to the station were built on a site that used to be occupied by a hillside squatter village.

The Lam Tin community has seen several rebuilding projects since the station was built. The interchange has brought in new residential and commercial demands in the community. The bus termini, the Lei Yue Mun Interchange, and other public transportation facilities transformed the Lam Tin area into an important transportation hub as well as a commercial and residential centre.

ReferencesEdit

Template:Reflist

Template:Sister project Template:Kwun Tong District Template:Kwun Tong Line navbox