Government
HQ for the British Consulate & British
Council, Hong Kong
1992-1997
Terry Farrell & Partners' design was the winning entry in
a limited competition to design the new British Consulate-General and
British Council buildings in Hong Kong.
This important Government commission required a particularly sensitive
design approach in view of Hong Kong's prominence on the world stage.
More significantly, the building represents Great Britain's continued
interests now that Hong Kong is a Special Administration Region of
China.
The new Consulate-General scheme provides accommodation for both the
British Consulate and the British Council on an impressive site at
the junction of Justice Drive and Supreme Court Road adjacent to the
new Hong Kong Park. The British Consulate-General benefits from commanding
views of Hong Kong harbour and Kowloon beyond.
The design concept arose from the belief that urban design was as important
as architectural design for this challenging site and resulted in two
separate perimeter buildings linked by a common entrance pavilion.
The two major buildings - the Consulate-General and the British Council
have their own position and identity while providing a long public
frontage to Hong Kong and quiet contemplative views to the private,
secluded gardens, carefully designed to retain many of the existing
trees on site, including some prized and protected species.
The architectural language - in marked contrast to the known commercial
Hong Kong style -establishes a modern, well-tailored and cool building
to achieve the brief requirement for a fine, welcoming building; identifiably
British. This language unifies both buildings and the consistent 10
storey height and roof line echoes the Hong Kong public buildings of
the past.
The buildings provide a total gross floor area of approximately 200,000
sq., ft., the Consulate-General incorporating Passport, Immigration,
Trade Commission and Consular departments and the British Council containing
a library, exhibition areas, substantial classrooms and teaching facilities.
The buildings are constructed of reinforced concrete frame. The main
elevations incorporate long hole-in-wall windows in a masonry clad
wall of white granite. Spandrels to the windows and panelled areas
around the entrances are in Kirkstone Slate. The elevations to major
rooms and principle circulation areas on the street frontages have
full height glazing in clear, anodised aluminium.
The Consulate and British Council building resolves itself through
a complex interplay of opposites: open and closed spaces, solid and
void, flat and sloping, public and private, urban bustle and natural
tranquillity. This is not an architecture that attempts to over-simplify
life by paring down reality. Like the city itself, it is a building
constantly in flux, providing a different face for each situation.
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