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9 museums selected in this guide.

The Hong Kong Science Museum is a hands-on exploration centre in Tsim Sha Tsui East with over 500 interactive exhibits spread across four floors and 18 galleries. It is especially popular with families and school groups.

The Hong Kong Space Museum is instantly recognisable by its distinctive egg-shaped dome on the Tsim Sha Tsui waterfront. It houses a planetarium, an IMAX dome theatre, and two exhibition halls covering astronomy and space exploration.

The Hong Kong Heritage Museum in Sha Tin is the territory's largest museum, covering art, culture, and design across 7,500 square metres. It is home to dedicated galleries on Cantonese opera and the legacy of Bruce Lee.
The Hong Kong Museum of History provides a comprehensive journey through Hong Kong's 400-million-year story, from its geological formation to the 1997 handover. The permanent exhibition, 'The Hong Kong Story,' uses immersive dioramas and multimedia to bring the past alive.

The Hong Kong Museum of Art is one of Asia's foremost public art institutions, reopened in 2019 after a four-year, HK$930-million renovation. Located on the Tsim Sha Tsui waterfront, it houses over 17,000 works spanning Chinese antiquities, calligraphy, contemporary Hong Kong art, and international collections.

A revamped waterfront museum showcasing Chinese art, Hong Kong art, and historical pictures of the city..
A war museum built into a former coastal fortress at Lei Yue Mun, covering Hong Kong's military history..

Flagstaff House is the oldest surviving colonial building in Hong Kong, built in 1846 as the residence of the Commander of British Forces. Today it houses the Museum of Tea Ware, a serene collection of Chinese tea vessels spanning from the Warring States period to the present.
Housed in the elegant Kom Tong Hall, the Dr Sun Yat-sen Museum explores the revolutionary leader's formative years in Hong Kong, where he studied medicine and developed his political ideology that would reshape China.