Stung by criticism that it failed to account for 1,310 square metres of space when it sold the former Marine Police headquarters to developer Cheung Kong (Holdings), the government announced how it plans to avoid such problems in future.
It simply will not provide any more estimates of gross floor area.
Secretary for Development Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor told lawmakers yesterday that the government will cease providing estimated gross floor area that developers can use when it tenders historic buildings.
Lam called her decision pragmatic as she responded to legislators' questions on the 30 per cent shortfall between the government's pre-tender estimate of 4,300 square metres and the space that proved to be actually available to Cheung Kong in its redevelopment of the historic headquarters site in Tsim Sha Tsui, now known as 1881 Heritage.
'The lands issue is very sensitive, even though we estimate in good faith,' Lam said. 'In the future, when it is different, there will be misunderstanding and unnecessary speculation, so judging from this, I prefer we will not make any estimation.'
She said the government had difficulty in calculating gross floor area in the same way developers did.
'The government may not have floor plans for the historic buildings,' she said. 'Meanwhile, as government buildings are exempted from the Buildings Ordinance, the government has a different way to calculate gross floor area.'