Template:Short description Template:About Template:Use Hong Kong English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Coord

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Hong Kong City Hall (HKCH, Template:Zh) is a building located at Edinburgh Place, Central, Hong Kong Island, Hong Kong.

In the 19th century, the British founded City of Victoria in the present-day Central after the establishment of the Crown Colony of Hong Kong. The Crown Colony (including City of Victoria) was governed by a Governor and Urban Council, there was no mayor or city council, therefore, the City Hall does not hold the offices of a city government, unlike most city halls around the world. Instead, it is a complex providing municipal services, including performing venues and libraries.

The City Hall is managed by the Government's Leisure and Cultural Services Department. The Urban Council (UrbCo) managed the City Hall (through the Urban Services Department) and held its meetings there prior to its dissolution in December 1999. Prior to its dissolution the UrbCo served as the municipal council for Hong Kong Island and Kowloon (including New Kowloon). The UrbCo had its meeting chamber in the Low Block of the City Hall. Template:TOC limit

First generationEdit

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File:Old City Hall HK.jpg
The 1869 City Hall, southern aspect, with Dent's Fountain at the middle.

Hong Kong's first City Hall was designed by the French architect Achille-Antoine Hermitte and was opened by Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh in a ceremony on 28 June 1869,Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Citation</ref> it occupied the current sites of the HSBC Hong Kong headquarters building (partly) and the Bank of China Building until its demolition in 1933.<ref name=EIA1>EIA: A survey report of Historical Buildings and Structures within the Project Area of the Central Reclamation Phase III, Chan Sui San Peter for the HK Government, February 2001</ref>

The current site of the HSBC Hong Kong headquarters building was occupied in part by the old City Hall, and in part by the first and second generations of the HSBC building.

Second generationEdit

File:City Hall and General Post Office.jpg
The City Hall and its surroundings in May 2010.
File:Hong Kong City Hall View 2014.jpg
City Hall Lower Block in April 2014
File:Hong Kong City Hall Lobby 201411.jpg
Lower Block Lobby in November 2014
File:HK Edinburgh Place 牌匾 City Hall Memorial Garden and Shrine.JPG
Commemorative plaque dedicated to all those who defended Hong Kong between 1941 and 1945 at the entrance to Memorial Gardens at Hong Kong City Hall. Taken in October 2009.
File:-HK CityHall SeaView 51217 3.jpg
Sea view from the City Hall High Block, in December 2005, with Edinburgh Place Ferry Pier still standing.

The second and current City Hall complex was built in the late 1950s following a public campaign led by the Sino-British Club for the re-establishment of a civic centre in Hong Kong.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> It was built on a Template:Convert plot of land on the newly reclaimed seafront, about Template:Convert from the first generation building.

The foundation stone laying ceremony took place on 25 February 1960 with Sir Robert Brown Black, then Governor of Hong Kong,<ref>Hong Kong City Hall at ArtLinkArt</ref> who also presided over the official opening ceremony on 2 March 1962.<ref>Hong Kong Memory: Grand opening of Hong Kong City Hall</ref> The City Hall was placed under the responsibility of the Urban Council.

Since 2009, it had been listed as a Grade I historic building.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> On 20 May 2022, the Hong Kong City Hall was declared a monument under the Antiquities and Monuments Ordinance. At the age of 60, it is the youngest as well as the first post-WW2 building in Hong Kong being declared as a monument.<ref name=emily>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

DesignEdit

The building complex erected at the present site based on the original design by Professor Gordon Brown, the first Head of Department of Architecture of Hong Kong University, together with his team including Patricia O'Reilly Mayne, was completed by British architects Ronald Phillips and Alan Fitch at the cost of HK$20 million. With its clean lines and stark geometric forms, the new Hall is an example of the International style fashionable at the time. The structure was constructed using steel and concrete, and much of the equipment was of steel, glass and anodised aluminium.<ref name=EIA1/>

The two separate blocks and gardens were laid out as a cohesive whole, along a central axis. The entrance to the lower block (exhibition hall) of the City Hall formed an axis with Queen's Pier to lend a sense of occasion to visiting dignitaries. On the façade of the Lower Block once had the old coat of arms of Hong Kong, which was removed before the handover in 1997.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> One major consideration was juxtaposing the city bustle whilst maximising public access to the surrounding area. Thus, the out-sized public areas of the Memorial Gardens and the piazza in front were conceived as a natural extension to promote the "freedom of movement and a sense of unlimited space".<ref name="Phillips">Template:Cite news</ref>

FunctionEdit

The most important civic function performed by City Hall was as a ceremonial location for the swearing in of successive Governors following their inauguration:<ref name=EIA2>Annexe B3 Template:Webarchive, EIA: A survey report of Historical Buildings and Structures within the Project Area of the Central Reclamation Phase III, Chan Sui San Peter for the HK Government, February 2001</ref> The 24th to 28th Governors all swore their oaths of office there.<ref name="Grade I">Antiquities Advisory Board: Brief Information on proposed Grade I Items. Item #52 Template:Webarchive</ref>

City Hall's Concert hall and theatre have been an important home to the performing arts in Hong Kong since its inauguration. A number of culture events, including the Hong Kong Festival, Hong Kong Arts Festival in 1973, Asian Arts Festival in 1976, the Hong Kong International Film Festival in 1977, and the International Arts Carnival in 1982 were hosted there. The conference room of the former Urban Council was also at the lower building of the City Hall.

The High block once housed Hong Kong's principal public library, until a new Central library was opened in 2001; the Hong Kong art gallery (which became the Hong Kong Art Museum in 1969) began life there on the tenth and eleventh floors. The Hong Kong Museum of History relocated in 1975, and the Hong Kong Museum of Art also moved out of City Hall in 1991.

The City Hall Memorial Garden, located at the north-western quadrant between the High Block and Low Block, is a walled garden wherein a 12-sided dodecagon Memorial Shrine commemorates soldiers and citizens who died in defence of Hong Kong during the Second World War. It is a popular spot and obligatory backdrop for photographs of couples who celebrate their marriage in the City Hall Registry. Within the Memorial Shrine are embedded memorial Roll of Honour and Plaques to combat units who fought in Hong Kong during World War II (1941–1945). Inscribed on the walls of the Memorial Shrine are eight Chinese characters evoking the everlasting spirit of the Brave and the Dead. The entrance gates to the City Hall Memorial Garden bear the regimental emblems of the Hong Kong Volunteer Defence Corps and Royal Hong Kong Regiment.

The complex also incorporates a three-storey car park, with 171 car park spaces,<ref name="Grade I"/><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> which was also designed by architects Ron Phillips and Alan Fitch.<ref name="Phillips"/>

FacilitiesEdit

File:Hong Kong City Hall Theatre 201205.jpg
Recital Hall in High Block in May 2012
File:The City Hall Memorial Garden Overview 2014.jpg
The memorial garden in the City Hall in February 2014
File:The City Hall Memorial Garden Memorial Shrine 2012.jpg
War memorial shrine in the memorial garden in July 2012

The second and current City Hall complex has two buildings, a garden and a three-storey car park.

City Hall Memorial Garden enclosing the World War II (1941–1945) Memorial Shrine

The High Block, a 12-storey building, is in the south-western end and houses a number of government facilities:

  • City Hall Public Library, an eight-storey facility, which in the past served as the central library of Hong Kong (9th – 11th floors)
  • Recital Hall with 111 seats (8th floor)
  • Exhibition Gallery, Template:Convert (7th floor)
  • Committee Rooms: two 40-seat committee rooms, each Template:Convert (7th floor)
  • Marriage Registry (1st floor)
  • Maxim's MX fast food restaurant, run by Maxim's Caterers (ground floor)

The 3-storey Low Block is at the eastern end, with the following facilities:

  • Exhibition Hall, Template:Convert (first floor)
  • HK Collectables Arts Shop (first floor)
  • Concert Hall with 1,430 seats and 60 standees (mezzanine)
  • Restaurants and a cafe, run by Maxim's Caterers: Chinese (City Hall Maxim's Palace), Continental (Deli and Wine), and European (City Hall Maxim's Café) cuisines
  • Theatre with 463 seats
  • URBTIX Box Office (foyer)
  • Enquiry counter (foyer)

High Block floor directoryEdit

11th floor Disabled access Reference Library / Business and Industry Library
Multimedia Resource Centre
10th floor Disabled access Reference Library (Entrance)
Creativity and Innovation Resource Centre
9th floor Disabled access Newspapers and Periodicals Reading Room
8th floor Disabled access Recital Hall
Extension Activities Room
7th floor Disabled access Exhibition Gallery
Committee Room South/North
6th floor Disabled access Computer and Information Centre
Office of Computerization Unit, Hong Kong Public Libraries
5th floor Disabled access Basic Law Library
Adult Lending Library
4th floor Disabled access Adult Lending Library
3rd floor Disabled access Adult Lending Library (Entrance)
Circulation Counter
2nd floor Disabled access Junior Library
1st floor Disabled access Marriage Registry
Ground floor Disabled access Library Cloakroom

See alsoEdit

Other civic centres in Hong Kong:

Nearby sites:

ReferencesEdit

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Further readingEdit

External linksEdit

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