From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Beaconsfield House
Building in Central, Hong Kong
Building in Central, Hong Kong
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Beaconsfield House |
| native_name | 拱北行 |
| image | Beaconsfield House 1966.jpg |
| image_size | 250px |
| caption | Beaconsfield House, Hong Kong, c.1966 |
| location | 4 Queen's Road, Central, Hong Kong |
| opening | 8 June 1963 |
| destruction_date | 1995 |
| building_type | Government offices |
| floor_count | 6 |
| elevator_count | 1 |
| owner | HK Government |
Built in 1963, the building was home to the Information Services Department until it was demolished along with the neighbouring Hong Kong Hilton in 1995, and Garden Road Multi-storey Car Park Building in 1998, to make way for the Cheung Kong Center.
Plot history
The 18300 sqft site was carved out of a rocky hill on the shore of Victoria Harbour. In 1841, Hong Kong's Deputy Superintendent of Trade and acting administrator, Alexander Johnstone, had the upper part of the hill levelled to build a home. The slope below was cut away to provide space for stables and outbuildings, and the rock and earth were used for reclamation.
First generation building
Beaconsfield House site was originally home to the Beaconsfield Arcade (so named for Benjamin Disraeli, Lord Beaconsfield), built in 1878 by Emanuel R Belilios. Belilios, a Calcutta-born Sephardi Jew who was at that time a Hong Kong Bank director and LegCo member, sold it to the government in 1898 under some controversy – the Legco Public Works Committee resolution to acquire it passed on Mr Belilios' own vote over a suppressed protest for pecuniary interest disqualification. Across the street from Hong Kong Bank itself and City Hall. Dent's Fountain was donated by Dent & Co. in 1864.
Beaconsfield was also named for a government building near Government Hill built in the late 19th century. It was demolished to make way for the French Mission Building of 1917 (at one time also owned by Mr Belilios).
Second generation building
The building was constructed in a utilitarian style of the 1960s, and consisted of 6 storeys.
The lower floors were occupied by the Royal Hong Kong Regiment, which had its officers' and NCOs' mess in the building. The building thus housed three service messes, a post office and, dominating the ground floor façade, a large public toilet. The Information Services Department moved its offices from the west wing of the Government Offices to Beaconsfield House.
The ISD and its 100 staff had moved into the two uppermost floors. The space was configured into a news room, press conference room, Chinese translators' office, teleprinter service, photographic studio and darkroom, art studio, editorial section, film unit and two theatres for the censorship of commercial feature films. A publications distribution office, administrative office and various secretarial desks also shared the space.
The messes served relatively cheap meals and were open to the public.
Access
The building could be accessed from Queen's Road by a single lift. The building had another pedestrian entrance at the fourth storey linked to Battery Path by a small bridge, at the level of the French Mission Building.
Redevelopment
In May 1994, there was criticism when it was revealed that the government entered into discussions with Li Ka-shing's Cheung Kong Holdings for the private sale of the site, along with the adjacent 33700 sqft Government car park site. Talks had commenced in May 1993, and were finalised in August 1995 In April 1995, Executive Council has approved the sale of the site, for a sum estimated to be in excess of HK$5.5 billion.
In September 1995, the planning authorities passed the redevelopment proposals for the 9,900 m2 combined site. With a plot ratio of 15, 1600000 sqft building (including car park) would be built. The developer, Cheung Kong Holdings, reached an agreement with the planners that most of the building (the current Cheung Kong Center) would actually go on the Hilton site; much of the car park and Beaconsfield House area would be given over to park and public amenities.
References
References
- [http://www.info.gov.hk/isd/40th/7.html Chapter 7: Defending the North House] GIS through the years. HK Government. Retrieved 27 July 2007
- http://www.legco.gov.hk/1897-98/h980223.pdf. Legco Proceedings 23 February 1898
- link. (29 June 2011 , ''The Standard'', 18 September 1995)
- Joshua Fellman, [http://sunzi1.lib.hku.hk/newspaper/view/12_07.04/117849.pdf Government silent over 'private sale'], [[The Standard (Hong Kong). The Standard]], 4 May 1994
- link. (22 April 2008 , [[The Standard (Hong Kong)). The Standard]], 2 August 1995
- link. (22 April 2008 , ''The Standard'', 28 April 1995)
- link. (22 April 2008 , ''[[The Standard (Hong Kong)). The Standard]]'', 16 September 1995
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Beaconsfield House — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report