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NARRATOR:
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government Headquarters (2007–2011) study model is an architectural model created by Rocco Yim and Rocco Design Architects in 2011, measuring 44.5 centimetres high, 91.2 centimetres wide, and 136 centimetres deep. The medium includes cardboard and acrylic.
The model represents an architectural complex that sits near the Central and Western District Promenade with its back to the Admiralty Centre. The complex can be divided into three sections. Viewed from the Promenade, the left section is the Legislative Council Complex. The middle section is the Central Government Offices. The right section is the Chief Executive’s Office. The complex constitutes one city block surrounded by roads, which are represented in the form of a city plan drawn with thin black lines. Behind the complex is Harcourt Road; on the left is Tim Mei Avenue; in the front near the shore is Lung Wo Road; and on the right is Tim Wa Avenue.
For the 3D part of the model, at the very back is the footbridge of the Admiralty Centre. The footbridge is connected to the building in front of it, the Central Government Offices. Further in front, on the left is the Legislative Council Complex, and on the right is the Chief Executive’s Office. The Tamar Park runs through the complex at the central line until it reaches the shore at the front edge of the model, overpassing Lung Wo Road and connecting to the Central and Western District Promenade.
The footbridge of the Admiralty Centre forks into two arms that both connect to the headquarters complex. The aerial view of the footbridge appears like a hollow waterdrop. The tallest building in the complex is the Central Government Offices. Echoing the design concept of ‘doors always open’, the building has a shape that resembles a door that is opened, and is commonly referred to as the ‘open door’. The Central Government Offices are divided into the East Wing and the West Wing. To imitate the shape of the building, put your straight palms facing each other; move the right palm slightly upwards, curve the fingers at the base knuckles and lay them on the left hand’s fingertips. Your right hand is the West Wing that has a light-blue exterior, and your left hand is the East Wing that has a dark-grey exterior. Behind the back of your left hand is the East Wing Forecourt, which is commonly known as ‘Civic Square’. The space between your palms is the starting point of the Tamar Park. Under the Central Government Offices, the park’s pedestrian walkway forks into two major walkways. The walkways diverge like the slanting strokes of the capital letter A as they extend towards Victoria Harbour, and they are connected by a horizontal walkway and 4 paths that are arranged into a zig-zag shape.
On the left of the headquarters complex is the Legislative Council Complex with the Office Block and the Council Block. On the left is the Office Block with a dark-grey exterior and a height of half the Central Government Offices. Its aerial view appears like the shape of the number 7. On the right is the Council Block that looks like a compound of a rectangular building and a cylindrical building with half the height of the Office Block. The interior can be seen through the frosted semi-transparent exterior. The rooftop of the rectangular building is green, representing a green roof with vegetation.
On the right of the headquarters complex is the Chief Executive’s Office, whose height is similar to that of the Council Block of the Legislative Council Complex. It looks like a huge shipping container, and the wall that faces the harbour is transparent. The roof and the wall that faces Tim Wa Avenue are covered by alternating vertical green plates and transparent plates, through which the interior can be partially seen.
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