SYDNEY, July 31 -- As one of the most popular and recognizable venues in Sydney's Chinatown, Golden Century has been serving up traditional Cantonese dishes and fresh seafood for over 30 years.
Before COVID-19, the three-storey establishment could hold over 600 diners at once, offering a range of dishes from the luxurious to more standard fare, and attracting customers from all walks of Sydney-life.
Now, with record COVID-19 cases in the city of Melbourne and Sydney being potentially on the brink of a second wave, restaurants and bars are preparing to be hit with a return to lockdown as they struggle to survive.
The man responsible for turning Golden Century into a Sydney icon, Eric Wong, told Xinhua that the pandemic is the biggest challenge he has faced in 30 years.
He explained that businesses in Chinatown, and across Sydney, have had to adapt fast to the constantly changing situation and government advices.
"At this time it is always up and down. For example two weeks ago, we felt very confident and so we extended from three days to being open five days a week," Wong said.
"That was two weeks ago, but now business has slowed down again because of Melbourne's problem."
Before the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, Golden Century had witnessed many nights when the restaurant was filled wall-to-wall with happy customers enjoying one of Sydney's great hubs. Families would celebrate birthdays and other milestones, alongside visiting Chinese businessmen spending thousands of dollars on premium dishes like king crab.
In those days, the restaurant's reputation made it popular among overseas visitors, and the sudden loss of that market has meant big changes for Wong's bottom line. Local customers in general simply don't spend as much, he explained.
"When we had more visitors coming from places like China and across Asia we could sell all kinds of seafood," Wong said.
"Now we don't keep them in the tank. If we get maybe one customer saying that they want king crab then we will order it special for them."
Even if the customer demand was there, concerns over several outbreaks at Sydney bars and restaurants have forced health officials to reintroduce limits on group numbers and crack down on business practices.
"At the moment bookings are only allowed to be 10 people per group. Normally we are happy to do groups of 20-30 but at the moment we can't," Wong said.
On the other side of Chinatown is another great Sydney institution in the form of Chinatown's longest standing restaurant, Emperor's Garden, which first opened in 1979.
The son of the restaurant's original founder, Valentine Yee, said while times were tough, establishing a home delivery service had been one of the ways of keeping the business afloat.
The Yee family has accrued a range of other businesses in the district so have also been able to offer products from their cake shop and raw meat business as part of the delivery service.
"COVID-19 was a shock initially but I think we're starting to get used to it because we're changing our ways of doing business," Yee said.
"After the first wave it was a bit hard on us but now we've adapted, so this second lot of clusters (in Sydney), I think we're ready for that."
One of those overseeing the historic moment for Chinatown is president of the Haymarket Chamber of Commerce, Simon Chan.
Chan told Xinhua that with over 200 restaurants, Haymarket, which encompasses the Chinatown district, is vulnerable to the impact of further outbreaks in Sydney's hospitality sector.
"We are all hoping that Sydney will not experience the extent of the second wave as Melbourne does and we will all have to work together in terms of taking all necessary COVID-19 safety precautions to minimize the potential and impact of a second wave," he said.
However, he added that with centuries of history behind it, Chinatown is more than just a restaurant district.
The area is without doubt an important cultural and historical feature of Sydney as well -- giving all those who live and work there the confidence that once the virus passes, the unique life and heart of the place will return.
"Chinatown is among the top three tourist destinations in Sydney along with Sydney Harbour Bridge and the Opera House and it is an important economic and social hub of Sydney for both local residents as well as for international tourists," Chan said.
"I have a very positive outlook for Chinatown and it will continue to be a significant economic and social hub in Sydney when the international border is open again."
Chelsea doctor and surfing in Australia 切尔西队医与球队和解,澳大利亚冲浪
Drama queen 小题大做的人
Close, but no cigar 几近成功
There's method to my madness 我有一个不合常理的办法
Clean up your act 改邪归正
Brexit and Hockney's art 英国脱欧公投后进展,大卫·霍克尼艺术展
Cyborg beetle and the teenage brain 半机械甲虫,青少年脑部发育
Canada wildfire and NASA discovery 加拿大林火,美国国家航空航天局发现系外行星
Crash course 速成课
Until I'm blue in the face 任凭你磨破嘴皮
Glass-bottomed bridge, cancer risk for HRT and 120-year-old man 世界最长玻璃桥开放,荷尔蒙替代疗法增患癌风险,印度教120岁僧人
Pain in the neck 令人讨厌的事情或人
Russian athletes and friendly robots 俄罗斯运动员服用兴奋剂,“合作机器人”
Hot potato 棘手的问题“烫手山芋”
A recipe for disaster 后患无穷
Antibiotics and escalator etiquette 美国人过多使用抗生素,伦敦地铁扶梯礼仪
To make a monkey out of me 捉弄我
Going forward 从今往后
World's longest tunnel and a strange kind of race 世界最长铁路隧道,扛羊毛袋比赛
Test the water 试探,摸底
Cyclists make Olympic history, 400-year-old shark 英国自行车运动员创英奥运历史,400岁格陵兰鲨鱼
To turn something upside down 把……翻个底朝天
Cheap and cheerful 物美价廉
Phelps makes history and marine species 菲尔普斯创造历史,海洋新物种
Earth-like planet, Pink cockatoo dies at 83 类地行星,83岁风头鹦鹉逝世
A bitter pill to swallow 不得不吞的苦药
Axe to grind 别有用心
To make a mountain out of a molehill 小题大做
The university of life 生活经历
Knee-jerk reaction 本能反映