The clock tower is an announced landmark spotted along the Tsim Sha Tsui Promenade, toward the end of Salisbury Road neglecting Victoria Harbor on Kowloon's south shore. The clock is all that remaining parts of the Kowloon-Canton Railway Terminus which was the last stop along the Kowloon-Canton Railway. Development of the route station was finished in 1916. The train operation and station were migrated to Hung Hom Station in 1975 and the building pulverized in 1977 while the tower remained the main piece of the building untouched. The tower was safeguarded as an indication of the steam train time and of the numerous Chinese foreigners who went through this station to start another life in Hong Kong.
The tower is made of red brick and rock, it rises 44 meters starting from the earliest stage an extra 7 meters tall lightning pole. The square tower is finished with a barrel shaped spire and a white vault. One of the clocks in the clock tower was introduced in the tower in 1915 and originated from the Pedder Street Clock Tower which was pulverized in 1913. The other three clocks on the tower were included 1920. The clocks have been ceaselessly ticking from that point forward separated from a short period amid the Japanese control of World War II. It is conceivable to climb a wooden staircase inside the clock tower.