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Recovery of Married Inspectors’ Quarters at Central Police Station compound

Paid Post:Tai Kwun
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Tai Kwun – Centre for Heritage and Arts, Hong Kong’s new landmark for arts, culture and heritage, won the highest honour in the 2019 UNESCO Asia-Pacific Awards for Cultural Heritage Conservation.

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The Central Police Station compound (CPS) is one of Hong Kong’s most iconic heritage sites, comprising three declared monuments with a history dating back more than 170 years.

Working in partnership with the Government of the HKSAR, The Hong Kong Jockey Club has conserved and revitalised CPS as Tai Kwun – Centre for Heritage and Arts, opening it to the public in May 2018. 

Of the 16 historic buildings at the site, 15 were restored and opened last year. The remaining building, the Married Inspectors’ Quarters (Block 4), sustained a partial collapse during restoration work in May 2016.

The Club has gone to great lengths to conserve and revitalise the Central Police Station compound as Tai Kwun – Centre for Heritage and Arts. It now provides a cultural space for public enjoyment of heritage, contemporary art and performing arts programmes.
The Club has gone to great lengths to conserve and revitalise the Central Police Station compound as Tai Kwun – Centre for Heritage and Arts. It now provides a cultural space for public enjoyment of heritage, contemporary art and performing arts programmes.
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The Club aims to safely open Block 4 as an arts and cultural space for public benefits and allow participation from the community, while restoring it from heritage conservation perspective to meet modern safety requirements. In the recovery process, it is mindful of the need to strike a balance between work and public safety and heritage conservation.

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