in 2022 Starting from
Dundas Street in
Yau Ma Tei, it runs north and meets major roads,
Argyle Street and
Mong Kok Road, and ends at the junction with
Prince Edward Road West. This street is a hot spot for Hong Kong people. The section south of Argyle Street concentrates shops of electronic products at street level and
upstair bookstores above. The busiest portion of the street was
pedestrianised all week long in 2000. However, the Traffic and Transport Committee of the
Yau Tsim Mong District Council voted on 21 November 2013 to restrict the pedestrianisation to weekends and public holidays only, citing complaints from local residents. A survey conducted by the
Home Affairs Department found that 80 per cent of residents and shop owners wanted to limit pedestrianisation, while most people questioned on the street wanted to keep the weekday pedestrianisation. In spite of criticism, the pedestrianisation hours were reduced to weekends only with effect from January 2014. Retail rents on the street subsequently dropped. The noise of street performers has increasingly become a point of contention at Sai Yeung Choi Street South, as at certain other locations in Hong Kong (e.g.
Tuen Mun Park). As such public singing and dancing is common in mainland Chinese squares and parks, Hong Kong media have called the phenomenon an example of the "
mainlandisation" of Hong Kong. The "often-off-key singing blasting from the loudspeakers" is considered excessively loud and lacking in artistic merit. A study commissioned by the
Liberal Party found that noise levels on Saturday nights reached 101.5 decibels. In response to pressure from residents and businesses, the Yau Tsim Mong District Council voted in May 2018 to temporarily suspend the pedestrianisation scheme, and the pedestrian zone ceased to exist at 10pm on 29 July 2018. ==Sai Yeung Choi Street North==