South China Morning Post

Palace Museum to open with 70pc of tickets for July sold

Security measures require visitors to go through metal detectors, with belongings to be screened

- Jess Ma jess.ma@scmp.com

The Hong Kong Palace Museum is set to open its doors on Saturday, having sold more than 70 per cent of tickets for next month and received a final shipment of national treasures loaned by its counterpar­t in Beijing.

Unlike M+, the other flagship museum at the West Kowloon Cultural District, visitors to the Hong Kong Palace Museum will have to undergo security checks at the entrance on the ground floor, passing through metal detectors upon entry while backpacks and other belongings will be screened by an X-ray detection machine.

“We have been working overnight to place the artefacts in our exhibition halls, everything will be placed in display cabinets tonight and our exhibition­s will be ready. We are confident that the Palace Museum is ready to be fully opened on July 2,” said museum director Dr Louis Ng.

Visitors are required to buy tickets for entry. About 100,000 tickets for July – 60,000 for general admission and 40,000 for special admittance – were already sold by last Sunday, less than two weeks since sales began on June 14.

The general admission tickets, each priced at HK$50 for adults, will allow visitors to take in seven exhibition­s, while the special tickets at HK$120 each cover all nine.

The museum will be open to the public for free on Wednesdays during its first year of operation. Slots for free entry in July were booked out by last Sunday, the West Kowloon Cultural District Authority said.

The museum will release tickets for the first week of August on July 12, along with additional tickets for July 12 to July 31.

When asked about the unpreceden­ted security check arrangemen­t, Ng said the measures were jointly devised with the Beijing Palace Museum to protect artefacts on loan from the capital.

Ng refused to name examples of forbidden items at the Hong Kong Palace Museum, saying there were no hard-and-fast rules, as the museum trusted security staff at the entrance to make profession­al decisions that would both protect the artefacts and ensure a pleasant experience for visitors.

Food and water can be brought into the museum but not consumed. Eating and drinking remain prohibited inside exhibition halls.

Brian Yuen, the museum’s deputy director of operations, said a free daily shuttle service around the West Kowloon Cultural District would be available for visitors to get to the palace museum, M+ and the western entrance of the district.

The service will run from 10am to 7pm, departing every 15 minutes with each bus carrying a maximum of 28 passengers.

A Post reporter recorded a 6 1 /2 minute journey on the service from the museum to M+. A round trip took about 10 minutes.

Five minibus lines from Kowloon MTR station will be available daily to transport visitors to the museum. A new bus route, 973, connecting Tsim Sha Tsui and Stanley, will commence service from July 2 with a stop in front of the museum.

About 500 parking spaces will be available in the cultural district, with around 30 situated in the car park at the museum.

Three restaurant­s will be available at the museum, serving Chinese, French and Western cafe-style food respective­ly. French eatery Crepes and Bakes is already in operation, while the Chinese noodle bar and cafe will open before Saturday.

The nine inaugural exhibition­s span across dynasties and artefact types. Exhibits include ceramics and paintings, as well as contempora­ry work referencin­g traditiona­l Chinese culture from local artists. Grade-one national treasures loaned temporaril­y from the Palace Museum in Beijing will be displayed in a number of exhibition­s.

The Hong Kong Palace Museum, the result of a HK$3.5 billion deal with Beijing to create a replica of the capital’s Palace Museum, is part of celebratio­ns marking the city’s 25th anniversar­y of its return to Chinese rule.

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