China Daily (Hong Kong)

TAI KWUN GO

- NAME OF THE JOCKEY CLUB CPS LIMITED

The new Tai Kwun Centre for Heritage and Arts in Central has finally been unveiled. Encompassi­ng a former police station, prison, magistracy and living quarters, director Timothy Calnin thinks “for most visitors, the big reveal will be how extensive it is”

It’s an extraordin­ary combinatio­n where our primary focus is on heritage and the arts, as well as giving audiences wonderful experience­s, but supported by a great range of commercial businesses including food and beverage styles at a range of price points. The idea is that we want people to come here frequently, which we would regard as a great indicator of whether we’ve really captured the imaginatio­n of the Hong Kong public.

For example, the Parade Ground is this generous space surrounded by a wonderful collection of different architectu­ral styles from the 1850s to the 1920s. It’s a beautiful space for people to wander through — something that’s really unexpected in the heart of Central. Around it are three very casual and affordable places with outdoor seating: a Chinese tea house, a Hong Kong canteen and a French cafe. However, if you feel like something at the other end of the spectrum, there’s Statement, a fine-dining restaurant operated by Aqua Group.

From the commercial relationsh­ips we have with the tenants — a lot of which will be self-funding — and from our Jockey Club programmin­g budget. The long-term goal is to cultivate knowledge and appreciati­on of arts and history in Hong Kong.

The tendering process was quite involved because we were trying to make sure every commercial operator had a distinctiv­e reason for being here. Among the retail outlets, for example, there’s a family tailor shop called Eunice Tailor, which used to make the ceremonial uniforms for the police. They were looking to find a new space in Central, so they’re moving into the Barracks Block. It’s a nice way of keeping that connection with when the site was a fully functionin­g police station.

We have Madame Fu, a restaurant with lounges, bars and private dining, on the top floor of the former Barracks Block, creating quite funky events involving performanc­es or celebritie­s. Then there’s Dining Concepts’ Dragonfly, which is a live music club enclosed within the old Superinten­dent’s House. They have an indoor space and a relaxed outdoor space with tables for live music. We hope they will bring a different kind of visitor again.

The late-night scene has so many possibilit­ies. Music artists who may be doing a performanc­e in the auditorium can go and do a late-night gig in one of the restaurant­s or bars, so there’s a sense of an after-party or a late-night event.

In the galleries themselves, as part of our push to give new experience­s to audiences, we’re bringing Art After Hours on a Friday night — extending beyond the usual 9 or 10 pm — with some informal entertainm­ent like live music or a relevant film screening, or you might be taken around by the curator or artist. I think that’ll have a following of its own. It’s that whole “night at the museum” concept — a little bit privileged.

We ask what each of these individual businesses can bring to the cultural life of the site to provide a deeper level of public activation. So there’s a ceramics company that will hold workshops. There will be chefs holding cooking classes. There’s a beautiful Taschen bookshop that will open in the Police Headquarte­rs Building with a great wealth of art publicatio­ns. They’ll host talks by authors or artists as part of their program and we’ll factor that into ours as well.

An exciting prospect is visitors coming in with the expectatio­n that they’re going to see a heritage site and getting distracted. It might be a film screening at the Laundry Steps’ casual semi-outdoor cinema; they might drop into the galleries and see something unexpected; or somebody going to dinner might join a tour and hear some of the extraordin­ary stories told through the heri- tage interpreta­tion around the site. It’s those sorts of things that I think will make it a place that people will come back to, time and again.

 ?? © TAI KWUN 2018; TAI KWUN IS THE TRADING ?? Tai Kwun director Timothy Calnin.
© TAI KWUN 2018; TAI KWUN IS THE TRADING Tai Kwun director Timothy Calnin.

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