Quarry Bay Park

Quarry Bay Park (Chinese: 鰂魚涌公園) is an urban park located in the Quarry Bay area of Hong Kong Island's Eastern District. It lies between the waterfront and the Tai Koo Shing housing estate, and covers around 9.79 hectares (24.2 acres). The park is managed by the Leisure and Cultural Services Department of the Hong Kong Government.

Quarry Bay Park
鰂魚涌公園
LocationQuarry Bay, Hong Kong
Opened1994 (1994)
Operated byLeisure and Cultural Services Department
OpenYear round
Public transit accessTai Koo Station
Quarry Bay Station
Hong Kong Tramways
Arbor in Phase One of Quarry Bay Park. On the left is the Taikoo Shing private residential development, and the Island Eastern Corridor is on the right.
A playground inside the park

History

Quarry Bay Park was planned by the former Urban Council in the 1980s on newly reclaimed land, in concert with major infrastructure development in the area, including the Island Eastern Corridor and the portal of the Eastern Harbour Crossing. The park is divided by this infrastructure into several disparate sites. The total planned extent of the park was around 15 hectares and certain sites have yet to be developed.

Phase One of the park, which opened to the public on 17 June 1994, covers around 9.79 hectares (24.2 acres).[1]

In 2009 four workers at Quarry Bay Park were fined for conspiracy to defraud. A senior amenities assistant and three of his subordinates had lodged numerous funding requests with the Architectural Services Department for nonexistent small repairs work. These small sums were not used for repairs but were collected to install staff toilets and sinks in the park management office.[2]

The planned second and third phases of the park will be located adjacent to Hoi Chak Street (海澤街) in Quarry Bay according to plans published in 2010. However, due to the land being then occupied by a police vehicle pound and examination centre along with the temporary vehicle depot of the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department (FEHD) as well as a temporary works area for the Water Supplies Department (WSD), expansion plans were suspended.[3] In 2012, the Hong Kong Police Force and the FEHD permanently relocated to Chai Wan. However, the WSD requested that the Eastern District Council extend their lease for a further three years. The council questioned whether the WSD had taken the problem seriously. This stalled expansion plans while the council continued to object to the request. A WSD spokesmen told local media that the 4,000-square-metre (43,000 sq ft) temporary works area was provided to a contractor for material storage in case of emergencies such as mains bursts. The Lands Department offered WSD a 2,000-square-metre (22,000 sq ft) temporary site in Chai Wan, but alternative land was needed due to size requirements. The Lands Department was unable to find another suitable site for WSD on Hong Kong Island as most of the area had been developed or earmarked for future use. To sustain the water supply service, the WSD concluded that their lease extension was necessary.[4]

On 10 March 2006, a retired fire-boat was successfully hoisted into its new permanent home on the central concourse of the park, where it was converted to the Fireboat Alexander Grantham Exhibition Gallery. The gallery opened to the public as a museum in 2007.

The gallery displays a number of unique firefighting artefacts, which offer a wealth of information in multimedia formats to enhance visitors' understanding of marine rescue work in Hong Kong. It closes every Tuesdays (except on public holidays), and the first and second days of Chinese New Year. Entry is free. [5]

gollark: I *have* used them before, several times. Also NuclearCraft fusion.
gollark: I don't think they go up to 100MRF/t, but about 9.6.
gollark: Yes, but most things use less than that.
gollark: So after running a bunch in quick succession, the wither containment temporarily cut out and it escaped.
gollark: I did it with RFTools shields before, but as it turns out they actually burn through lots of RF resisting wither damage.

See also

References

  1. Leisure and Cultural Services Department Archived 19 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Man, Joyce (12 August 2009). "Government workers fined for toilet trickery". South China Morning Post. p. 3.
  3. "LCQ18: Quarry Bay Park" (Press release). news.gov.hk. news.gov.hk. 19 December 2012. Retrieved 14 May 2014.
  4. 鰂魚涌公園 擴建動工無期 [Quarry Bay Park, unforeseeable expansion schedule]. orientaldaily (in Chinese). Hong Kong: orientaldaily. 22 November 2012. Retrieved 14 May 2014.
  5. "Introduction". Hong Kong Museum of History. Retrieved 14 May 2014.

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