Macau: Area
Places and attractions in the Area category
Categories
- Museum
- Gambling
- Nightlife
- Park
- Historical place
- Casino
- Church
- Hotel casino
- Specialty museum
- History museum
- Area
- Hotel
- Temple
- Island
- Shopping
- Bridge
- Sport
- Sport venue
- Universities and schools
Macau/Peninsula
The Macau Peninsula is the most populous and historic part of Macau. It has an area of 8.5 square kilometers and is geographically connected to Guangdong province at the northeast through an isthmus 200 meters wide.
Macau/Taipa
Island with casinos and sports venues Taipa is an island in Macau, presently united with the island of Coloane by reclaimed land known as Cotai. Administratively, the boundaries of the traditional civil parish Freguesia de Nossa Senhora do Carmo are coterminous with that of former Taipa Island.
Macau/Coloane
Island with temples, beaches Coloane is an island in Macau that is united with the island of Taipa by an area of reclaimed land known as Cotai. It is located at the southern part of Macau.
São Lázaro
São Lázaro is the smallest civil parish of Macau, located in the central-east region of the Macau Peninsula. It is surrounded by the parishes of Nossa Senhora de Fátima, Santo António, and Sé.
Ilha Verde
Ilha Verde, also known by its Cantonese name Cing-zau and Mandarin name Qingzhou, is an area in the northwest of Macau Peninsula, Macau that forms part of the Our Lady Fatima Parish.
Hebao Island
Hebao Island is a resort island off the southern coast of Guangdong province in the People's Republic of China. Located in the South China Sea, it is approximately 100 kilometers West-Southwest of Hong Kong.
Hengqin
Hengqin is an island in Zhuhai, a prefecture-level city and Special Economic Zone in Guangdong Province of the People's Republic of China. It has a population of about 3,000. Parts of Hengqin were leased to Macau by the State Council of the People's Republic of China starting in 2009, with the area expanding.
Lampacau
Lampacau or Lampacao, also known by other names, was a small island in the Pearl River Delta, which in the mid-16th century played an important role in Sino-Portuguese trade. Lampacau no longer exists as a separate island, as sedimentary deposits from the Pearl River system resulted in it becoming a part of a larger island.