Features · Five compared
Cross-cutting features on the five: origins and naming disputes, campus character and landmarks, canteen culture, and shifting rankings — the five universities side by side, an enjoyable read on how they differ.
Articles
4 articlesThe ‘Best Of’ the Five: Who’s Oldest, Richest, and Throws the Best Parties
Put the five universities side by side and someone always asks “which one’s actually the best?”—which is precisely the wrong question. This article asks a different set: who’s the oldest, who’s the richest, who’s the most international, whose single subject can crack the world’s top five, and whose traditions are the most gloriously unhinged. Twelve dimensions, each with one real answer—not another round of “each has its own strengths.”
The Origins and Names of Hong Kong's Five Universities—Who Is Oldest, Youngest, and Who Changed Their Name
The five universities came into being through three paths—HKU by colonial legislation, CUHK by merging three colleges, and HKUST as a greenfield project. PolyU and CityU took the route of \"post-secondary college upgraded and renamed.\" Who is oldest, who is youngest, and who was the last to claim the \"university\" title, traced back to sources, item by item.
The Five Universities' Canteen Underworld: Contractors, Signature Dishes, and the Spirit of the Hearth in a Bowl of Rice
Five universities, five canteen underworlds: HKU has \"Sam So\" and the green robes of high-table dinner; CUHK has the Women Workers' Co-op and its eighteen-year lease war; HKUST has LG7 and dining with the sea view; CityU's canteens have lived on as an annexe of a shopping mall; PolyU leverages its red-brick podium to \"spread\" its canteens into a network. The Maxim's Group and the contractor system are an inescapable thread, but every school has digested this outsourcing logic and flavoured it with its own character.
Campus Characters and Landmarks of the Five Universities: The Mountain City, Colonial Red Brick, Seaview Newcomer, Mall-Integrated Campus, and the Red-Brick Cluster
The campus temperaments of Hong Kong’s five major universities diverge wildly—CUHK is a wholly independent mountain city facing the sea, the largest campus in the city; HKU is a century-spanning museum of architecture on Dragon Lung Hill, and the most land-constrained of the five; HKUST is a seaview newcomer in Clear Water Bay on land that was almost turned into a barracks, using a red-bird sundial and an armillary sphere to narrate “science as a conversation across time”; CityU has audaciously “grown out of a shopping mall,” the only campus stacked atop an MTR station and retail centre; PolyU is a sprawling mid-century modern red-brick city at the mouth of the Cross-Harbour Tunnel, suddenly pierced into heterogeneity by Zaha Hadid’s fluid white tower. This article unpacks each campus’s character and signature landmarks, cross-referencing which is the largest, the most beautiful, the most convenient, and the “least university-like,” with every statement sourced.