Greater Bay Area food fest lights up Mid-Autumn holiday


On Sept. 27, the 2025 Shenzhen–Hong Kong–Macao Pedestrian Street Mid-Autumn Food Festival kicked off at Dongmen Old Street in Shenzhen, Temple Street in Hong Kong, and Rua do Cunha in Macao.
The 10-day event brings together local delicacies, traditional crafts, cultural performances, and interactive tech experiences, offering residents and tourists a vibrant holiday destination during the Mid-Autumn Festival and the National Day holiday.
In Shenzhen, more than 80 stalls feature specialties such as poon choi (a Cantonese layered communal pot), dim sum, Hong Kong-style curry fish balls, Macao egg tarts, and Taiwanese wheel cakes and rice vermicelli with pork intestine, creating a festive reunion feast.
Hands-on activities include lantern-making, Cantonese opera mask painting, and traditional sculpture workshops, while the tech zone offers VR experiences, programmable block robots, and other interactive attractions to entertain visitors of all ages.
To boost cross-border engagement, the three cities launched the "GBA Travel Pass" mini-program, enabling visitors to claim exclusive discounts from hundreds of participating merchants. The opening day featured a joint livestream across Shenzhen, Hong Kong, and Macao that drew over 100,000 online viewers and involved more than 20 media outlets, sparking widespread social-media buzz and plans by many viewers to visit the sites in person.
The Dongmen venue will run through Oct. 6 with daily performances — including live bands, lion dances, student art showcases, and talent shows — ensuring fresh programming throughout the 10-day run. The "GBA Travel Pass" will continue issuing digital coupons through late October to sustain visitor interest beyond the festival dates.
Organizers say the festival aims to support small businesses and local vendors by driving foot traffic and boosting holiday spending, while giving visitors a convenient, cross-border taste of Greater Bay Area culture.
The event also reflects deeper ties among the three historic streets — strengthened through recent partnership agreements and regular exchanges — and forms part of a broader effort to revitalize these districts and advance cultural, tourism, and commercial integration across the Greater Bay Area.