Rickshaw puller Hung Chiu-ping is the last man standing.
The 63-year-old has been taking passengers along Hong Kong's streets for 30 years, but demand for the service has dwindled away.
Now Hung is one of only two registered rickshaw licence holders in the city - and the other is understood to have called it a day.
'I'm the only one left,' he said. 'I'll keep working until I can't do it physically any more.'
In 1924, almost 3,500 rickshaws were plying the streets. This fell to just under 1,000 in 1953 and by 1997 there were only seven holders of the government-issued licences. Hung works six days a week on The Peak, waiting for passengers with his hand-made vehicle near the Lion lookout pavilion.
Dressed in cotton shoes, a straw hat and a black silk jacket with a mandarin collar, Hung walks with a spring in his step and is quick to crack a joke.
Business has been slow in the past two years, he said, with customers less willing to part with the HK$20 it costs to take a photo on the rickshaw or the HK$100 for a short ride.