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Hong Kong lawmakers question need for HK$700 million gallery on prime site to showcase projects

Government plans to set up a gallery on Wan Chai waterfront to showcase major projects such as Northern Metropolis

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The San Tin area is to become a tech hub under government plans. Photo: Dickson Lee
Hong Kong lawmakers have questioned a government proposal to build a HK$700 million (US$90 million) exhibition hall at a prime site to showcase major development projects including the Northern Metropolis.
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They also urged the government on Tuesday to lower the cost of the first-stage development of the San Tin Technopole, a hub near the border with mainland China, after authorities revealed they would apply for HK$30 billion in funding from the legislature.

At the centre of the controversy was a government plan to spend around HK$600 million to HK$700 million on setting up a gallery on the Wan Chai North waterfront to showcase major projects, such as the Northern Metropolis and a major reclamation project off Lantau Island.

The funding for the gallery was included in the government’s HK$30 billion planned financial application for the first-stage development of the technopole.

Lawmaker Lo Wai-kwok, chairman of the Business and Professionals Alliance for Hong Kong, questioned whether the government was fully utilising the prime site by building the gallery there.

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“The site of the gallery is very valuable,” he told a meeting of the Legislative Council’s development panel. “There are also not enough details available for discussion regarding construction of the gallery.”

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