Imperial-style Jumbo To Vanish From Aberdeen Waters

"); jQuery("#212 h3").html("

Related News Programmes

"); });

2022-05-30 HKT 22:30

Share this story

facebook

  • The Jumbo Floating Restaurant has been a fixture in Southern District for more than four decades. Image: Shutterstock

    The Jumbo Floating Restaurant has been a fixture in Southern District for more than four decades. Image: Shutterstock

Hong Kong's Jumbo Floating Restaurant is sailing away from Aberdeen harbour after more than four decades, its owner announced on Monday.

Aberdeen Restaurant Enterprises explained that the vessel's license is set to expire next month and that it is searching for a proper docking space for the floating restaurant, pointing out that Hong Kong currently does not have a shipyard that can house and carry out regular maintenance for the massive structure.

"As different sectors in Hong Kong have been hit by the fifth wave of infections, we foresee that the Jumbo floating restaurant cannot return to business in the near future," said the company.

The former tourist destination saw its operations suspended in March 2020 after suffering years of losses.

It was donated to Ocean Park as part of the government's plan to develop the Southern District.

But the amusement park later said it could not find a third-party operator to run the restaurant.

Its operator revealed that it had offered to donate the restaurant to more than 10 catering firms and organisations but no one was willing to take it up due to cost concerns.

Southern District councillor Paul Zimmerman said the government would need to grant Ocean Park "a special jumbo loan" to take on the floating restaurant.

"Alternatively, we need Covid measures to be lifted and tourism to resume before any commercial enterprise can be found interested in taking over Jumbo," Zimmerman said.

The company pointed out that it takes millions a year to keep the restaurant in shape to fulfill its licensing requirements.

It said it has decided to send the vessel away for maintenance and storage until a white knight appears to bring a new way out for the floating restaurant.

Floating restaurants first appeared in Aberdeen harbour shortly after World War II.

On 30 October 1971, a fire broke out on the Jumbo Floating Restaurant before its opening which left 34 people dead and 42 injured. It was eventually opened in 1976 by Stanley Ho and was originally decorated in the style of an ancient Chinese imperial palace.

Over 30 million people have visited the floating restaurant, including Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, Tom Cruise and Gong Li

RECENT NEWS

Circle CEO Says China Could Launch Yuan Stablecoin In 3 To 5 Years As Trade Grows

Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire predicts that China could roll out a yuan stablecoin within three to five years to expand the... Read more

Naver IPO Timeline Set As Dunamu Merger Targets Nasdaq Debut

Preparations for a Naver IPO are underway following an agreement between Naver Financial and cryptocurrency exchange op... Read more

TransUnion Urges Lenders To Rethink Credit Risk For Gig Workers In Hong Kong

TransUnion is urging lenders to update their risk assessment models, revealing that gig workers in Hong Kong exhibit st... Read more

Citi And Endowus Roll Out HK$4,000 Wealth-Linked Credit Card Campaign

Citi and digital wealth platform Endowus have launched a joint credit card promotion in Hong Kong, expanding the Citi E... Read more

Aspire Secures SFC License In Hong Kong To Launch SME Yield Product

Singapore-headquartered fintech Aspire has secured three financial licenses from the Securities and Futures Commission ... Read more

Why Stablecoins May Become The Backbone Of 24/7 Global Trade

Stablecoin transaction volumes surged 72% in 2025, reaching a record US$33 trillion and signalling growing institutiona... Read more