Hong Kong has a number of tunnels (and one bridge) that you have to pay to use. If you want to drive from Kowloon to Hong Kong (or vice versa) or from the New Territories to the Airport (or Tung Chung) you have no choice but to pay for the privilege. The other tunnels offer more direct (and hence quicker) routes into or around the New Territories.
You can pay the toll in cash, or automatically by using Autotoll. There is no discount for using Autotoll, and you have to pay in advance, but it saves you time. I don’t have a car, and hence the dearth of posts about the poor standard of driving in Hong Kong that you will find from Monsieur Merde and Giles the Rugby Fan. [I did have my eye on the extremely elegant Renault Vel Satis, but Fumier has persuaded me to consider a convertible – a 1992 yellow Saab or an old model 3-series – which are probably even more desirable.]
As a taxi user, I always hope that the cab has an Autotoll thingy, but I am usually disappointed. After all, what’s the incentive for a driver to pay in advance for something that will get him to his destination marginally quicker? If he has to queue up to pay the toll, it’s the customer who is paying for the time, and it seems to provide a good opportunity to get some change (for when Fumier jumps into your cab with nothing smaller than a $50 note).
Sitting in a small box for several hours at a time breathing in exhaust fumes and collecting small sums of money must be one of the more pointless human activities, especially when we have the technology to render it virtually obsolete. If I were in charge of Hong Kong transport policy I’d be trying to find a way to get more private cars and all taxis and commercial vehicles to use Autotoll. The complication is that apart from the (original) Cross Harbour Tunnel, all of these ventures (including Autotoll) are privately-run commercial enterprises. However, there must be a way of doing it if the government was really determined. So, no chance then…
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