Hong Kong, home to the world's most expensive homes, was the world's best car park trader.

According to the Hong Kong South China Morning Post (SCMP) on the 24th, a car park on the ground floor of the `` The Center '' building in Hong Kong's financial center recently traded for HK $ 7.6 million.

Since the space of a parking lot is 134.5 square feet, it is sold for about 300 million won per pyeong.

This is more than three times the median price of Hong Kong homes.

The Center building last year was sold to ten investors, including Hong Kong's top female richer, Li Kasing, to ten investors including Hong Kong's top female rich, Polyana Chu, for $ 5.15 billion.

At the time, it was the most expensive price in the history of real estate transactions.

The building also appeared in the background of the Hollywood film Batman: The Dark Knight.

The person who sold one of the underground parking spaces is Johnny Chung, the second-generation logistics conglomerate, one of the 10 investors who participated in the building last year.

The person who bought this parking lot also owns an office in the same building, but the identity is unknown.

In Central Hong Kong's downtown area, parking spaces are so plentiful that parking is traded for 'gold prices'.

It is especially popular among the mainlanders who want to show off their identity.

The Center building has 1.2 million square feet of office space, but there are only 402 parking spaces.

The average transaction price for a single car park is HK $ 6 million.

In Hong Kong, the price of residential parking is also 'gold'.

Hong Kong does not have underground parking in most apartments, so residents owning a car pay a monthly rent and rent a nearby parking lot.

As a result, businesses that buy parking lots in residential areas and then rent or rent them are gaining popularity as investment projects.

Last year, a car park in a luxury home in Hong Kong's Homantin district traded for about 900 million won.

The monthly rent for this luxury house parking lot is HK $ 10,000.

"The price of parking lot traffic in Hong Kong, where one in five people are poor, shows how serious the gap between the rich and the poor is," he said.

(Photo: Hong Kong Tourism Board, Yonhap News)