Pacific Place (Hong Kong)

Pacific Place is a complex of office towers and hotels and a shopping centre situated at 88 Queensway, Admiralty, Hong Kong. The latest phase, Three Pacific Place, is located at 1 Queen's Road East, Wan Chai.[2][3]

Pacific Place
View of Pacific Place entrance from Queensway
LocationWan Chai, Hong Kong
Coordinates
Address88 Queensway Admiralty and 1–3 Queen Road East
Opening date1988
DeveloperSwire Properties
Total retail floor areaOver 710,000 sq ft (66,000 m2)[1]
No. of floors4 (shopping mall)
Parking500 parking spaces
Websitewww.pacificplace.com.hk
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese太古廣場
Simplified Chinese太古广场
Literal meaningSwire/Taikoo Plaza
Banyan tree inside Pacific Place
The shopping arcade of Pacific Place
The Beauty Gallery in Level 1

The four-level mall is home to over 160 shops and boutiques [4] and one major department store. The complex is also home to three five-star hotels, a boutique hotel, three office towers and 270 serviced apartments.

Pacific Place complex is owned and managed by Swire Properties, with the exception of the three hotels (Conrad Hong Kong, Island Shangri-La and JW Marriott Hotel), in each of which it retains a 20 per cent equity interest.[5]

History

Pacific Place was developed by Swire Properties. Phases One and Two were built on land formerly part of Victoria Barracks, one of the first military compounds in Hong Kong. The land was auctioned by the Hong Kong Government during redevelopment and was successfully bid for by Swire. It was purchased in two tranches in 1985 and 1986 for a total cost of US$1 billion.[6] Phase One opened in 1988.[6] The Conrad International Hotel was completed in 1991.[7][8] Phase Three, built by Gammon Construction,[9] was completed in 2004.[1] It was developed from old buildings on Star Street, Wan Chai.[6]

Pacific Place underwent a major contemporisation project that was completed in 2011. It involved interior, exterior, and architectural refinements led by pioneering architect Thomas Heatherwick[4] which cost more than HK$2.1 billion.[10]

Phases

  • One
  • Two
    • Two Pacific Place
    • Island Shangri-La
      • Two Pacific Place and Island Shangri-La hotel occupy respectively the bottom half and the top half of the tallest tower of the complex, which is 213 metres high and has 56 floors.[11]
    • Conrad Hong Kong
    • Pacific Place Apartments
  • Three
    • Three Pacific Place

Shopping centre

The four-level shopping arcade houses both lifestyle and high-end shops in areas ranging from entertainment, dining, accessories to apparel. It houses one department store Harvey Nichols. A footbridge connects it across Queensway to Queensway Plaza and United Centre. It is connected by tunnels to the Admiralty MTR Station and Three Pacific Place. Escalators connect it to Hong Kong Park.

gollark: We might end up seeing Chinese (don't think Chinese is an actual language - Mandarin or whatever) with English technical terms mixed in.
gollark: Yes, because they have been (are? not sure) lagging behind with modern technological things, and so need(ed?) to use English-programmed English-documented things.
gollark: Which means piles of technical docs are in English, *programs* are in English, people working on technological things are using English a lot...It probably helps a bit that English is easy to type and ASCII text can be handled by basically any system around.
gollark: I don't think it was decided on for any sort of sane reason. English-speaking countries just dominated in technology.
gollark: It's probably quite a significant factor in pushing English adoption.

See also

References

Further reading

  • Jenks, Michael; Dempsey, Nicola (2005). Future Forms and Design For Sustainable Cities. Routledge. pp. 147–150. ISBN 9780750663090.
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