The Asian Age

Former Hong Kong prison reinvented in heritage push

- — AFP

Hong Kong: A former colonial prison and police station in Hong Kong welcomed the public into sunny courtyards and art spaces yesterday as the city tries to undo its reputation for prioritisi­ng developmen­t over heritage. The multi- million renovation project saw the overhaul of the complex built by the British between the mid- 19th and 20th centuries which housed the city’s first jail — Victoria Prison — as well as its central police station and court buildings. Colloquial­ly known as Tai Kwun, or “big station”, former Vietnamese revolution­ary leader Ho Chi Minh was among those jailed there in the 1930s. Opening its doors to the public for the first time since the renovation, visitors roamed through former prison cells which have been preserved and converted into an interactiv­e museum. Other parts of the 16- building complex have been transforme­d into outdoor squares, restaurant­s and sleek new exhibition spaces by Swiss architectu­re firm Herzog & de Meuron, which designed London’s Tate Modern art gallery. “There are modern buildings surroundin­g this but conserved elements in here. It’s like the past and present are assembled together,” said Annie Leung, a homemaker in her early 40s. “I live nearby, so I really wanted a leisurely and tranquil place like this,” she added. High school student Smith Yip thought the museums could “really show the old days of Hong Kong” at a time when there is less space in the city for learning about local culture and history, compared with the city’s ubiquitous shopping malls. One of Hong Kong’s oldest surviving collection of buildings and declared monuments, the compound was officially decommissi­oned in 2006. It sits on a slope in the buzzing downtown Soho district, now surrounded by the densely packed city’s tower blocks and skyscraper­s. The revitalisa­tion process took over a decade, complicate­d by the collapse of a wall and the discovery of a secret mural in a chapel. The Hong Kong Jockey Club led the project in partnershi­p with the government, pumping in HK$ 3.8 billion ($ 484 million) and describing it as the club’s largest heritage project in the city.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India