Audio guide introduction: 1 minute 49 seconds
When you arrive at Songhuangtai Station by subway, don't rush out of the gate first, because you have to admire Hong Kong's first cultural relics exhibition held in a station, "Relics from the Holy Mountain - Exhibition of Song and Yuan Dynasty Cultural Relics Unearthed at Songhuangtai" inside the gate. During the construction of Sung Wong Tai Station, a large number of cultural relics were unearthed. Therefore, the design of the station incorporated archaeological elements, and an exhibition introducing the history of Kowloon City was installed on the walls of the station. There are two display cabinets in the station lobby. The Antiquities and Monuments Office has selected more than 70 cultural relics from more than 400 unearthed cultural relics for display. The exhibition also introduces the archaeological work and archaeological discoveries that accompanied the construction of Songhuangtai Station and the history of Songhuangtai. The items unearthed this time are mainly ceramic fragments from the Song and Yuan Dynasties, including incense burners, Longquan kiln celadon, Fujian kiln celadon, etc., as well as Song Dynasty currency. This shows that before the British occupation of Hong Kong, ceramic trade, commerce and handicrafts had developed. With the testimony of these unearthed cultural relics, we can revise the view that Hong Kong was a "small fishing village" before the British occupation, and prove that Hong Kong is an area with equal emphasis on industry, commerce and fishing. The Antiquities and Monuments Office is currently preparing for the next round of exhibitions, which will include other valuable cultural relics. I believe there will also be the much-anticipated "square well". It is expected that citizens will be able to "frog in the well" and admire this uniquely designed well underneath the well.