Upper Basement, The Park Lane Hong Kong, 310 Gloucester Road 告士打道310號柏寧酒店 Upper Basement, The Park Lane Hong Kong, 310 Gloucester Road 告士打道310號柏寧酒店 (Hong Kong Island, Causeway Bay)
G/F, Man Hoi Building, 98-100 Electric Road 電氣道98-100號萬愷大廈G/F G/F, Man Hoi Building, 98-100 Electric Road 電氣道98-100號萬愷大廈G/F (Hong Kong Island, Tin Hau)
207-208, 2/F, Causeway Place, 1A-1L Yee Wo Street 怡和街1A-1L號銅鑼灣地帶2/F, 207-208 207-208, 2/F, Causeway Place, 1A-1L Yee Wo Street 怡和街1A-1L號銅鑼灣地帶2/F, 207-208
2-10 Great George St 記利佐治街2-10號 2-10 Great George St 記利佐治街2-10號
2 reviews of Pricerite
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Marie T.
Place rating: 3 Hong Kong
Generally, I would agree that Price Rite furniture is not that much better than IKEA. I purchased a coffee table here about 4 months ago and it’s already coming apart. Also, when they delivered it, they had scratched it up on the bottom area. Anyway they sell many kinds of furniture(study tables, coffee tables, sofas) but they don’t have as much of a selection as IKEA. They do also have smaller household items such as shower curtains, door mats, rods, storage boxes, lamps, small shelving, floor sleeping mats, vacuums, small toaster ovens, irons, etc. I like Price Rite, but not for furniture. They accept credit cards with a $ 100HKD minimum purchase.
Simon L.
Place rating: 4 Hong Kong
When it comes to buying furniture in HK, most think that we are stuck with the imported expensive stuff in Horizon Plaza, the cheaper tat of Ikea, or the traditional mom and pop Chinese furniture stores around Queen’s Road. Well, Price Rite could be your answer? It is basically an equivalent to Ikea, selling cheap, low quality furniture, which will suit expats travelling through on a work contract for a couple of years, or rental properties. In the UK, we would liken this to MFI, the original low cost flat packed furniture place. The products are fairly typical; sofas, desks, coffee tables, chairs, dining table, storage units, and they range from the fairly fancy and contemporary(think curvy wood grain finished tall boy storage cabinets), through to the sort of thing your grandma will have(think faux lather lazy boy armchair). Nothing is particularly expensive, certainly in comparison to a place like Hamptons, with a sofa bed setting you back around HKD2000−3000. What I do like about Price Rite is that they make small furniture. In HK, if I could afford 2000sqft, I could probably well afford the import sofas which are 12ft long. I would also have space for them. However, we mere mortals will have to suffice with 400sqft, and as such we don’t want to be filling the entire living room with one chair. It is though the designers at Price Rite have thought, «OK, HK is a small place, let’s make some small furniture so it fits in the elevator». It just all makes sense to me. Give it a go, yes it’s not the best quality, and will probably fall apart in a year or two, but so does Ikea furniture. Anyway, who wants a five year old sofa in their house? Your grandmama, that’s who.