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Hotel-to-student hostel conversions won’t hurt tourist capacity: Hong Kong official

But leading surveyor, who calls the move ‘innovative’ and ‘pragmatic’, warns of possible hurdles

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Student hostel Y83. A senior Hong Kong official says that allowing hotels to convert into hostels would not cannibalise tourist accommodation. Photo: Dickson Lee

Hong Kong’s move to repurpose excess office and hotel spaces to meet the growing housing needs of non-local students will not hurt the city’s tourism capacity, a senior official has said, while experts have warned of possible hurdles.

Doris Ho Pui-ling, permanent secretary for development for planning and lands, said on Monday that converting hotels would not cannibalise tourist accommodation, adding the supply of rooms was sufficient.

“We have more than 90,000 hotel rooms in Hong Kong with an occupancy rate of around 80 to 90 per cent, so as we see it now, the quantity should be able to support the development of the tourism industry,” Ho said.

“Ultimately, we will leave it to the market to decide whether some low-to-mid-priced hotels should be turned into student hostels.”

According to the latest figures from the Tourism Board, the average hotel occupancy rate was 86 per cent in April.

On Friday, the Development Bureau announced that it would expand the definition of “hotels” to include student hostels, waive planning procedures and simplify applications, allowing private operators to build the dormitories on commercial land more easily.

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