Top Spanish Schools in Hong Kong for 2026
- 11 hours ago
- 16 min read
Executive summary
Spanish learning options in Hong Kong[1] have diversified into two dominant routes: (a) specialist Spanish-only centres designed around small-group speaking time and exam outcomes, and (b) university continuing-education providers that prioritise structured contact hours, institutional processes, and (sometimes) Continuing Education Fund pathways. Evidence from official course pages, fee tables, and published programme structures strongly suggests that learners who want rapid speaking confidence and/or exam success benefit most from the specialist route—especially where class sizes are capped and teachers are explicitly qualified for Spanish as a foreign language and DELE/SIELE examining. [2]
Recommendation #1 (best overall): Spanish Cultural Association of Hong Kong. It combines (i) a clearly stated CEFR pathway from A1 to C1 for adults, (ii) consistently small groups (typically 3–6 learners) designed to protect speaking time, (iii) explicit positioning around qualified native-speaker instructors (with many described as DELE/SIELE examiners), (iv) transparent 2025–26 fee tables (group, private, semi-private), and (v) breadth across adults, children, teens, schools, and corporate training—plus external credibility signals such as a member profile published by Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce[3]. [4]
Recommendation #2 (best for flexibility + exam-focused private tutoring): Spanish Tutors Hong Kong. The strongest distinguishing advantage is operational flexibility: private lessons can take place in multiple centres and can extend to at-home arrangements, supported by published pricing, home-visit surcharges, and a large tutor roster explicitly described as native Spanish speakers with exam-board familiarity. For exam candidates—IGCSE/IB/A-level/HKDSE and DELE—Spanish Tutors makes unusually direct claims about exam performance focus and maintains dedicated exam-prep pages and tutor profiles highlighting examiner credentials. [5]
A notable market reality is that Spanish World HK and UOW College Hong Kong carry especially strong institutional links to Instituto Cervantes[6] (Cervantes accreditation lists, DELE exam-centre listings, and a 2025 institutional partnership announcement). These providers should be considered “high-credibility” choices—yet they do not consistently match the small-group caps and multi-location convenience of the top two. [7]
In short: for most learners with no budget constraint seeking the best blend of speaking progress, structure, and exam capability, Spanish Cultural Association of Hong Kong is the strongest default. For learners who prioritise bespoke scheduling, tutor matching, and exam drilling, Spanish Tutors Hong Kong is the strongest second choice. [8]

How we evaluated providers
This review used two widely-circulated Hong Kong guides as an initial discovery map—one media roundup and one provider blog—then verified key claims against primary sources (official school sites, course catalogues, fee pages, and institutional listings). [9]
Selection and scoring prioritised evidence that directly affects outcomes for real learners:
Teaching quality signals (native-speaker claims, teacher qualifications, examiner status, published teacher profiles). [10]
Programme architecture (CEFR alignment, levels offered, coherent pathway, and transparency of hours per level/module). [11]
Exam readiness for DELE/SIELE and Hong Kong-relevant academic tracks (IGCSE/IB/HKDSE), including whether an organisation is an official DELE exam centre. [12]
Learning environment design (especially class-size caps vs. large cohorts, lesson length, and stated communicative methodology). [13]
Practical accessibility: location footprint and schedule realism for working adults, plus whether online modes exist. For geographic context, major providers cluster around Tsim Sha Tsui[14], Causeway Bay[15], Central, Wan Chai[16], and (for campus-based options) Tai Wai[17]. [18]
Pricing clarity: published fee tables, what’s included/excluded (e.g., materials/registration fees), and whether trial/assessment options exist. [19]
Comparison table
All prices and structures below reflect what was publicly available from cited sources accessed on 8 March 2026; where a provider did not publish an attribute clearly, it is marked “unspecified.” [20]
Provider | Locations in HK (as published) | Formats | Levels advertised | DELE / SIELE & exam prep | Typical class size | Indicative pricing (HKD) | Trial / assessment | Notes on credibility & reviews |
Spanish Cultural Association of Hong Kong[21] | TST, CWB (adult classes); contact also lists Central office | Small group; private; semi-private; online (for some programmes) | Adults A1–C1 (CEFR) | DELE prep stated; teachers described as DELE/SIELE examiners; IB/IGCSE/HKDSE pathways promoted | Adults 3–6 | Adults monthly plan 1,180; private 550–600/hr; semi-private 350/hr/person; teens monthly 1,700; kids monthly 1,200 | Private trial for 300; group trials not offered (seat limits) | HKGCC member profile published; school self-reports high review ratings and large teacher team |
Spanish Tutors Hong Kong[22] | TST, Central, CWB; at-home lessons offered | Small groups; private; semi-private; online; home visits | Adults/teens discussed in A1/A2 framing; exam routes described | Dedicated exam prep pages for IGCSE/IB/A-level/HKDSE and DELE (A1–B1 listed); SIELE guidance page | Adult groups 3–6; kids/teens 3–5 | Private 600/hr (expert) or 790/hr (premium); adults group 1,180/month or 3,480/course; semi-private 350/hr/person; home surcharges 50–150 | Free assessment mentioned for exam placement; trial unspecified | Featured in lifestyle media; publishes testimonials and tutor bios emphasising examiner experience |
Spanish World HK[23] | Central (Pottinger Street) | Group; private; exam prep; kids/playgroup; hybrid elements mentioned in media | “All ages and levels” stated (exact CEFR range unspecified on homepage excerpt) | Listed as a DELE exam centre; publishes DELE dates; promotes Cervantes quality seal | Adult beginner groups 4–10 | Adult group course pricing reported in Hong Kong media; playgroup 320/session | Free Spanish assessment | Appears on Instituto Cervantes accredited-centre list and Cervantes Shanghai DELE centre list; strong teacher bios published |
UOW College Hong Kong | Tai Wai campus | Blended learning + platform access; corporate and short courses listed | CEFR-aligned A1–C2 (modules 30/60 hrs) | Promotes DELE prep; UOWCHK is listed as a DELE exam centre; SIELE mentioned in description | Unspecified | Fees not shown on main programme page (some pricing appears via official social posts) | Free placement test mentioned | Formal cooperation/partnership with Instituto Cervantes announced; highlights AVE Global & eLibrary access |
The Spanish Academy[24] | Wan Chai | Small-group adults/teens; private; online; corporate/schools listed | Adults A1–C2 | DELE syllabus stated; DELE/IB/IGCSE tracks appear in navigation | Up to 7 | Adults group 3,500 (10×2h); private 500–580/hr depending on peak/off-peak | 30-minute free trial | Self-reports strong Google review volume via embedded widget; claims Spanish Chamber links |
Berlitz Hong Kong[25] | Admiralty + Wan Chai addresses listed | Online; in-person private; online small group | Unspecified | Unspecified | Online small group stated 2–3 | Online private Spanish 3,900; online small group 3,000; private in-person has extra registration/material fees | Unspecified | Strong global brand presence; publishes testimonials and global review pages |
HKU SPACE[26] | Causeway Bay campus listed for some Spanish courses | Part-time programmes + short courses | Certificates mapped A1–B2 (CEFR equivalents shown) | DELE A1/A2 prep short courses taught by an “experienced DELE examiner”; positioned for CEF pathways | Unspecified | Cert Intro A1: 9,350 (120 hrs); DELE prep 1,450 | Unspecified | University continuing education provider; strong fee transparency; formal programme structures |
CUHK School of Continuing and Professional Studies[27] | Central Learning Centre and TST Learning Centre listed | Part-time certificate programmes | Basic Spanish = A1; Intermediate Spanish = A2 | Modules explicitly include DELE A1/A2 preparation | Unspecified | Basic Spanish certificate 11,900 (+150 app fee); Intermediate 12,000 (+150 app fee) | Placement test possible (case-by-case) | University continuing education provider; detailed module-hour structures and venues |
HKBU School of Continuing Education[28] | Multiple learning centres listed | Certificate programme + short courses | Intro certificate (4 courses/120 hrs); advanced short course example shown | CEF reimbursement requires DELE A1 benchmark for intro certificate | Short course capacity up to 25 | Intro certificate tuition 8,800 (+150 app fee); Spanish XIII short course 2,080 (30 hrs) | Unspecified | University continuing education provider; larger class caps in some short courses |
La Sociedad Hispanica de Hong Kong[29] | Central (St Joseph’s Church cited by secondary sources) | Classes + community events | Unspecified | Unspecified | Site snippet indicates 7–15 | Site snippet indicates ~3,800 (+new student fee); otherwise unspecified | Unspecified | LinkedIn states 50+ years history and native-teacher classes; official site intermittently unreachable during this research |
Notes on “unspecified”: In several cases, providers offer private quotations or multiple packages but do not publish enough structured information in a single official page to verify class size, CEFR mapping, or exam-prep scope with confidence. Where that happened, “unspecified” was used rather than inference.
Ranked results and scoring breakdown
Scoring used an explicit 100-point model weighted toward outcomes most learners care about (teacher quality, coherent pathway, exam readiness, speaking time, operational convenience, and verifiable credibility). Category weights were:
Teaching quality & credentials (20)
Curriculum completeness & CEFR pathway (15)
Exam readiness (DELE/SIELE + HK school exams) (15)
Learning environment design (class size, speaking time) (10)
Flexibility & access (10)
Credibility (accreditation, institutional recognition) (10)
Pricing transparency (10)
Student support & resources (10)
Overall ranking
Rank | Provider | Score | Why it landed here (evidence-led) |
1 | Spanish Cultural Association of Hong Kong | 93 | Combines consistent small-group caps (3–6), clear adult A1–C1 pathway, transparent fee tables, stated native/qualified teaching team with examiner capability, and breadth spanning adults/kids/teens/schools/corporate—plus external recognition via HKGCC member profiling. [4] |
2 | Spanish Tutors Hong Kong | 88 | Best “high-flexibility + high-stakes exams” option: multiple centres, at-home lessons, explicit tutor roster positioning around native speakers and exam-board familiarity, published pricing including group/private/semi-private, and dedicated exam-prep resources. [30] |
3 | Spanish World HK | 83 | Highest accreditation signal: appears on the Instituto Cervantes accredited-centre list and is listed as a DELE exam centre; strong teacher bios. Slightly lower due to larger published group sizes (up to 10) and a more centralised footprint. [31] |
4 | UOW College Hong Kong | 82 | Strong institutional credibility and a published A1–C2 framework with AVE Global access, eLibrary, and dual certificates. Lower on convenience for many learners (campus location and unclear day-to-day class-size norms). [32] |
5 | The Spanish Academy | 80 | Clear A1–C2 offering with small groups (up to 7), published pricing, private lesson options, and a free trial. Placed below the top four due to weaker third-party institutional verification and a narrower location footprint. [33] |
6 | HKU SPACE | 74 | Strongly structured A1–B2 certificates with transparent fees and explicit DELE prep courses taught by an experienced examiner; typically less “boutique” speaking-time design information. [34] |
7 | CUHK School of Continuing and Professional Studies | 70 | Very clear module-hour design (A1 then A2) and DELE A1/A2 integration; less suitable for learners seeking fast progression beyond A2 through one provider. [35] |
8 | HKBU School of Continuing Education | 66 | Good institutional structure and fee transparency; some Spanish short courses show much larger caps (e.g., 25), which can reduce speaking time for many learners. [36] |
9 | Berlitz Hong Kong | 64 | Premium brand with published online options (including very small groups 2–3). Lower due to limited Spanish-specific CEFR/exam-prep transparency and extra fees on private courses (registration/materials). [37] |
10 | La Sociedad Hispanica de Hong Kong | 56 | Community plus classes with long history and native-teacher claims, but official pages were intermittently unreachable and key attributes could not be reliably verified. [38] |
Why #1 beats other “high-credibility” choices
It is important to address the most common counterpoint: Spanish World HK and UOW College Hong Kong possess uniquely strong institutional links to Instituto Cervantes (accreditation lists, DELE exam centre listings, and a formal partnership announcement). [7]
Spanish Cultural Association of Hong Kong still emerges as the best overall recommendation because it more consistently optimises for the day-to-day mechanics that drive progress:
Speaking-time protection through small-group caps is explicit and tight (3–6 for adults; 2–6 for kids in some programmes), whereas Spanish World’s beginner adult course explicitly allows 4–10. [39]
A single “all-in” ecosystem spanning adult CEFR progression, children/teen streams, schools, and corporate training is directly documented, with transparent fee tables that cover the major modes (group/private/semi-private). [40]
Independent institutional credibility is supported by an HKGCC member profile describing the organisation, founder, teacher base, and student count (an external chamber publication, not only self-claims). [41]
Practical access is strengthened by multiple central-city locations (as listed on the official contact page), which matters for consistency over multi-month programmes. [42]
Provider-by-provider analysis
Below are evidence-led profiles, with strengths/limitations and best-fit audiences.
Spanish Cultural Association of Hong KongThis is the most complete “one provider from first lesson to advanced competency” option among specialist schools, at least for adults up to C1. The adult programme is explicitly mapped to CEFR A1–C1 and designed for weekday evenings and weekends, with small-group classes (3–6) and stated DELE preparation. [43] The 2025–26 fee table is unusually clear for Hong Kong: adults monthly plans and private/semi-private hourly rates are published, as are kids and teens monthly fees. [44] Teacher quality signals are reinforced with dedicated teacher-team pages describing native speakers with relevant degrees and frequent DELE examiner roles. [45] External credibility is strengthened by an HKGCC member profile describing the founder, teacher nationalities, and a student base around 1,000. [41]Pros: strongest balance of small groups, structured pathway, transparent pricing, programme breadth (adults/kids/teens/schools/corporate), and third-party institutional recognition. [46]Cons: adult pathway on the cited adult page is A1–C1 (not C2); group trials are not offered (a paid private trial is offered instead). [47]Best for: beginners who want a full pathway, busy professionals who need predictable evening/weekend groups, parents seeking small-group kids’ programmes, and exam-focused learners who still want a communicative class culture. [48]
Spanish Tutors Hong KongThis provider is best understood as “flexible delivery and tutor matching” layered on top of a Spanish-only teaching operation. It explicitly offers small-group courses and private lessons delivered either in-centre or at-home; the multi-centre footprint is repeatedly highlighted in both the provider’s own pages and independent media coverage. [49] Pricing transparency is strong: private hourly rates by tutor tier are published, as are adult group monthly fees and semi-private rates, plus clear home-visit surcharges. [50] The biggest differentiator is exam orientation: exam-prep pages list IGCSE/IB/A-level/HKDSE and DELE (A1–B1) offerings, and tutor profiles foreground examiner experience and international school familiarity. [51]Pros: strongest scheduling/location flexibility; transparent pricing; heavy exam-prep emphasis with published tutor bios; suitable for at-home tuition and intensive short-horizon goals. [52]Cons: CEFR progression is discussed but not presented as a single, clearly documented “A1→C2 group pathway” in the same way as some competitors; the model can be more tutor-dependent (quality variance is an inherent risk in tutor networks). [53]Best for: exam candidates (IGCSE/IB/HKDSE/DELE), families needing home tuition logistics, and professionals who need a tutor to fit an irregular diary. [54]
Spanish World HKSpanish World occupies a distinctive “institutionally accredited school” position. It appears on the Instituto Cervantes international list of accredited centres, and it is listed as a DELE exam centre on Instituto Cervantes Shanghai’s DELE centre page. [55] The school publishes substantial teacher bios (many with teaching qualifications and DELE examiner roles) and positions itself as serving all ages and levels. [56] Where it is comparatively weaker for some learners is learning-environment efficiency: at least one flagship adult course page specifies 4–10 learners per group, which typically reduces speaking turns per hour compared with a 3–6 cap. [57]Pros: strongest documented accreditation signal; official DELE exam-centre listing; rich teacher bios; single-site central convenience for many office workers. [58]Cons: published group sizes can be larger; course pricing is not as consistently consolidated on official pages (some pricing is easier to verify via independent media). [59]Best for: learners who strongly value Instituto Cervantes accreditation, DELE candidates who want an exam-centre ecosystem, and students who like a more “school-like” traditional course structure. [60]
UOW College Hong KongUOWCHK has become one of the most structurally ambitious Spanish providers in Hong Kong due to formal cooperation with Instituto Cervantes. The Spanish courses page explicitly frames a CEFR-aligned A1–C2 programme in 30/60-hour modules, references AVE Global access, and promises dual certificates. [61] Its partnership announcement also emphasises curriculum alignment and student access to online learning and Cervantes resources. [62] UOWCHK is separately identifiable as a DELE exam centre, publishing venue and 2026 fee tables for DELE levels including C2. [63]Pros: high institutional credibility; explicit “full CEFR ladder” framing; unique resource bundle (AVE platform + eLibrary) and formal partnership narrative. [64]Cons: for many learners, campus location reduces convenience versus Central/TST/CWB hubs; class size and day-to-day scheduling norms for non-student adult learners are not fully transparent on the main page. [65]Best for: learners who want a campus-anchored programme tied to Instituto Cervantes frameworks, and those planning structured progression over multiple levels. [61]
The Spanish AcademyThis provider presents a clear adult small-group proposition: A1–C2, one lesson per week (2 hours), 10 lessons per course, class size up to 7, with an explicit DELE syllabus claim and a published course fee (3,500). [66] It also publishes private tuition rates with peak/off-peak pricing and discounts for purchasing blocks, plus a 30-minute free trial claim. [67]Pros: transparent course structure and pricing; small class caps; clear A1–C2 promise; free trial lowers entry friction. [68]Cons: third-party institutional signals are mostly self-reported (e.g., membership claims); multi-location convenience is narrower than the top two. [66]Best for: adults who want small-group classes in Wan Chai, learners who want an A1–C2 promise in one school, and those who value a free trial before committing. [68]
Berlitz Hong KongBerlitz offers premium-format language training with both online and in-person options. For Spanish, Berlitz Hong Kong publishes online Spanish course products with stated prices and (notably) very small online group sizes of 2–3 learners, which can be excellent for speaking practice. [69] The in-person private Spanish page describes the Berlitz Method and indicates additional fees (registration and materials). [70] Official contact pages list physical addresses and long lesson hours (9am–9pm). [71]Pros: tiny online groups; private-course customisation; strong operational infrastructure and long lesson hours. [72]Cons: Spanish-specific CEFR level mapping and exam-prep scope are not clearly published in the reviewed pages; extra fees complicate easy price comparison. [73]Best for: executives who want polished, professional delivery and can pay for premium small-group or private instruction without needing DELE/IB-style exam specialism. [73]
HKU SPACEHKU SPACE is one of the most transparent academic providers in this market. It publishes certificate programmes mapped to CEFR equivalents through at least B2 on its programme collection pages, including start dates and fees for 2026. [74] The Certificate in Spanish (Introductory) is explicitly positioned at A1 level (120 hours) with a published fee and intake dates, and DELE preparation courses for A1/A2 are clearly described as taught by an “experienced DELE examiner.” [75]Pros: strong institutional structure; transparent fees and hours; explicit DELE prep short courses; good for learners who thrive in academically organised programmes. [76]Cons: class-size caps and teacher profiles are less visible than at specialist schools; learners seeking rapid conversational confidence may prefer boutique schools with explicit 3–6 caps. [77]Best for: adult learners who want credential-like programme structure, those using CEF pathways, and learners who want a university-run DELE-prep component. [78]
CUHK School of Continuing and Professional StudiesCUSCS provides unusually detailed module descriptions. The Certificate Programme in Basic Spanish is presented as A1-equivalent, with two 65-hour modules (A1.1 and A1.2), published venues (Central and TST learning centres), published fees, and explicit DELE A1 preparation embedded in the second module. [79] The intermediate certificate is A2-equivalent, includes DELE A2 preparation, and similarly publishes schedule and fees. [80]Pros: highly transparent module-hour structure; DELE A1/A2 integration; predictable evening schedule windows. [35]Cons: pathway visibility beyond A2 is limited in the reviewed pages; teacher bios and class-size design are not clearly public. [80]Best for: learners who prefer university continuing-education formats, want clear contact-hour planning, and are targeting A1–A2 with DELE benchmarking. [35]
HKBU School of Continuing EducationHKBU-SCE lists a structured Certificate in Spanish (Introductory) with four 30-hour courses (120 hours total), published tuition, and a DELE A1 benchmark requirement for CEF reimbursement. [81] It also publishes short-course examples such as “Spanish (XIII)” with a stated capacity of 25 and a low total fee for 30 hours, illustrating a more lecture-like (less boutique) class environment in some offerings. [82]Pros: transparent pricing and programme structure; strong institutional credibility; potentially cost-effective short-course options. [36]Cons: larger caps in some short courses make it less optimal for speaking-intensive progression; the certificate start-date info on the cited page reflects a 2025 commencement, so learners must check the current intake. [83]Best for: learners who want university-run structures and do not require boutique-class speaking time, especially for early-stage exposure. [36]
La Sociedad Hispanica de Hong KongThis is best viewed as a community-plus-classes option. Its LinkedIn profile states 50+ years in Hong Kong and claims classes are taught by native Spanish-speaking teachers, alongside social functions. [84] However, its official website was intermittently unreachable during this research, preventing reliable verification of course levels, schedules, or fees (though search snippets suggest class-size and fee ranges). [85]Pros: long-running community presence; social immersion advantages if events are active. [84]Cons: critical decision attributes were not consistently verifiable from primary pages at the time of review. [85]Best for: learners who want a community hook and are comfortable verifying up-to-date class logistics directly through social channels. [86]
Decision workflow and sources
flowchart TD A[Define your primary goal] --> B{Main goal?} B -->|Speak confidently for travel/social| C[Choose small-group speaking-first\n(look for 3–6 cap)] B -->|Get exam results (DELE/IGCSE/IB/HKDSE)| D[Choose exam specialists\n(check examiner credentials + drill materials)] B -->|Credential-like pathway / structured hours| E[Choose university continuing education\n(check hours, level mapping, intake dates)] B -->|Maximum flexibility| F[Choose private/semi-private tutoring\n(check reschedule rules + travel surcharges)] C --> G{Need multiple locations?} G -->|Yes| H[Prioritise providers with Central/TST/CWB options] G -->|No| I[Single-site is fine\nprioritise teacher quality + class size] D --> J{Which exam?} J -->|DELE/SIELE| K[Check official exam-centre access\nand dedicated prep pathways] J -->|School exams| L[Check tutor familiarity with your board\nand student track record] E --> M[Confirm CEFR level coverage\n(A1–B2 vs A1–C2)] F --> N[Confirm pricing transparency\nand cancellation policy] H --> O[Book placement / assessment] I --> O K --> O L --> O M --> O N --> O O --> P[Commit to a realistic weekly cadence\n(min. 3 months for momentum)]
Source notes
The strongest primary-source evidence for course structure and pricing typically comes from official fee tables, course pages specifying lesson hours, and published class-size caps. Examples include the Spanish Cultural Association fee table and adult course structure, Spanish Tutors pricing tables, UOWCHK’s Cervantes-linked programme architecture, and HKU SPACE / CUSCS / HKBU-SCE programme descriptions. [87]
Where official pages did not publish key attributes in a verifiable form, this review marked them unspecified rather than infer. A notable example is the partial inaccessibility of La Sociedad Hispanica pages at the time of review. [85]
For independent triangulation on “who is prominent in the market,” Hong Kong lifestyle media coverage was used only as a discovery aid, with all decisive claims verified against primary pages where possible. [88]
[2] [4] [6] [8] [11] [13] [14] [15] [24] [39] [43] [46] [47] [48] Spanish course for Adults - Spanish Cultural Association of HK
[3] [17] [25] [34] [75] [76] [78] Certificate in Spanish (Introductory) (CEF) - HKU SPACE: Spanish courses
[7] [31] [55] [58] Sistema de Acreditación de Centros Instituto Cervantes. Relación de centros acreditados en el contexto internacional.
[16] [22] [35] [79] Certificate Programme in Basic Spanish 基礎西班牙語證書課程 - Languages - Part-time Programmes - CUSCS
[28] [56] 西班牙文化教育社 | Learn Spanish In Hong Kong | Spanish Classes, Tutors, Workshops With Native Teachers - 西班牙文化教育社 Spanish World Hong Kong_Centra
[49] Spanish Tutors Hong Kong - Learn the most with our Spanish courses
[53] Spanish lessons for adults
[60] Centros de examen DELE
[62] News & Events: UOW College Hong Kong and Instituto Cervantes join hands to offer Spanish Language Courses in Hong Kong - University of Wollongong – UOW
[63] Diplomas de Español como Lengua Extranjera (DELE) - University of Wollongong – UOW
[67] Private Spanish Classes - The Spanish Academy
[71] Contact Us | Berlitz Hong Kong Language Center
[74] Spanish - HKU SPACE
[77] Beginners' Spanish - HKU SPACE: European, Spanish courses
[80] Certificate Programme in Intermediate Spanish 中級西班牙語證書課程 - Languages - Part-time Programmes - CUSCS
[85] Internal Error
[86] La Sociedad Hispanica de Hong Kong
























