HSBC Building (Hong Kong)

HSBC Main Building
香港上海滙豐銀行總行大廈

HSBC Main Building in June 2008
Location within Hong Kong
General information
Status Complete
Type Commercial offices
Architectural style Structural Expressionism
Location 1 Queen's Road Central
Central, Hong Kong
Coordinates 22°16′48″N 114°9′34″E / 22.28000°N 114.15944°E / 22.28000; 114.15944Coordinates: 22°16′48″N 114°9′34″E / 22.28000°N 114.15944°E / 22.28000; 114.15944
Construction started 1983
Completed 1985
Cost US$780 million
Height
Roof 178.8 m (586.6 ft)
Technical details
Floor count 44
Floor area 99,000 m2 (1,065,627 sq ft)
Lifts/elevators 28
Design and construction
Architect Foster and Partners
Structural engineer Ove Arup & Partners
Cleveland Bridge Ltd.
Quantity surveyor WT Partnership
Main contractor Wimpey International
References
[1][2][3][4][5]
HSBC Building
Traditional Chinese 香港上海滙豐銀行大廈
Simplified Chinese 香港上海汇丰银行大厦

HSBC Main Building (Chinese: 香港滙豐總行大廈) is a headquarters building of The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, which is today a wholly owned subsidiary of London-based HSBC Holdings. It is located along the southern side of Statue Square near the location of the old City Hall, Hong Kong (built in 1869, demolished in 1933). The previous HSBC building was built in 1935 and pulled down to make way for the current building. The address remains as 1 Queen's Road Central (the north facing side of the building was served by Des Voeux Road, which was seashore, making Queen's Road was the main entrance, in contrast to modern day that usually accessed the bank from Des Voeux Road). The building can be reached from Exit K of Central MTR Station and facing Statue Square.

History

The second design of the HSBC headquarters building, used from 1886 to 1933.
First building

The first HSBC (then known as the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Company Limited) building was Wardley House, used as HSBC office between 1865 to 1882 on the present site. In 1864 the lease cost HKD 500 a month. After raising a capital of HKD 5 million, the bank opened its door in 1865.[6]

Second building

Wardley House was subsequently demolished and replaced by a second HSBC building, that was completed in 1886.[7] The main feature of the second building design was the division of the structure into two almost separate buildings. The building on Queen's Road Central was in Victorian style with a verandah, colonnades and an octagonal dome, whereas the arcade which harmonised with the adjacent buildings was constructed on Des Voeux Road.

The third design of the HSBC headquarters building in 1936
Third building

In 1935, the second building was demolished and a third design was erected. The third design used part of the land of the old City Hall, and was built in a mixed Art Deco and Stripped Classical style. During the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong, the building served as the government headquarters. It was the first building in Hong Kong to be fully air-conditioned. By the 1970s the bank had outgrown its headquarters; departments were scattered into offices all over Central Hong Kong, and it was obvious that such a "solution" to the space limitations could not continue indefinitely. In 1978 the bank decided to tear down its headquarters and rebuild it again.

Current building

The new building was finished on 18 November 1985. At the time, it was the most expensive building in the world (c.a.HK$5.2 billion, roughly US$668 million).

The first major addition to the building, designed by Hong Kong's One Space Ltd, was completed on 23 November 2006, in the form of a ground floor lobby that improves security access to the upper floors and creates a prestigious reception area. Its design and construction included the installation of the "Asian Story Wall", a multimedia installation consisting of twin banks of 30 seamless plasma screens (the largest installation of its kind in Hong Kong) displaying archived bank heritage and artworks.

The atrium of the HSBC building was the site of the Occupy Hong Kong protests which maintained a presence in the building from 15 October 2011 until their eviction in September 2012.[8]

Design

The new building was designed by the British architect Norman, Lord Foster and civil & structural engineers Ove Arup & Partners with service design by J. Roger Preston & Partners, and was constructed by Wimpey International.[9] From the concept to completion, it took seven years (1978–1985). The building is 180 metres high with 47 storeys and four basement levels. The building has a modular design consisting of five steel modules prefabricated in the UK by Scott Lithgow Shipbuilders near Glasgow, and shipped to Hong Kong. About 30,000 tons of steel and 4,500 tons of aluminium were used.

The original design was heavily inspired by the Douglas Gilling designed Qantas International Centre in Sydney (currently known as Suncorp Place).[10]

The new Lobby and its 2-part Asian Story Wall were designed by Greg Pearce, of One Space Limited. Pearce was also the Principal Architect of the Hong Kong Airport Express (MTR) station. Conceived as a minimalist glass envelope, the new lobby is designed to be deferential to Foster's structure and appears almost to be part of the original.

The building is also one of the few to not have elevators as the primary carrier of building traffic. Instead, elevators only stop every few floors, and floors are interconnected by escalators.

Characteristics

The main characteristic of HSBC Hong Kong headquarters is its absence of internal supporting structure.

Another notable feature is that natural sunlight is the major source of lighting inside the building. There is a bank of giant mirrors at the top of the atrium, which can reflect natural sunlight into the atrium and hence down into the plaza. Through the use of natural sunlight, this design helps to conserve energy. Additionally, sun shades are provided on the external facades to block direct sunlight going into the building and to reduce heat gain. Instead of fresh water, sea water is used as coolant for the air-conditioning system.

All flooring is made from lightweight movable panels, under which lies a comprehensive network of power, telecommunication, and air-conditioning systems. This design was to allow equipment such as computer terminals to be installed quickly and easily.

Because of the urgency to finish the project, the construction of the building relied heavily on off-site prefabrication; components were manufactured all over the world. For example, the structural steel came from Britain; the glass, aluminium cladding and flooring came from the United States while the service modules came from Japan.

The inverted 'va' segments of the suspension trusses spanning the construction at double-height levels is the most obvious characteristic of the building. It consists of eight groups of four aluminium-clad steel columns which ascend from the foundations up through the core structure, and five levels of triangular suspension trusses which are locked into these masts.

Feng shui

HSBC installed two "cannons" on the roof, pointing directly at the Bank of China Building, allegedly to balance the negative feng shui energy directed at it.[11][12][13]

The early British settlers in Hong Kong had an interest in feng shui; thus, most of the earliest buildings in Hong Kong, and many buildings constructed thereafter, were built with the philosophies of feng shui in mind. The Chinese believe that those who have a direct view of a body of water—whether it is a river, a sea, or an ocean—are more likely to prosper than those who do not (water is strongly associated with wealth in feng shui). The HSBC building has a wide open area (the Statue Square) in front of it, with no other buildings blocking its view of Victoria Harbour; thus, it is considered to have "good feng shui".[14]

In the CBC Television series Doc Zone episode "Superstitious Minds",[15] Writer, Researcher & Associate Producer Tom Puchniak asserts that the design of the nearby Bank of China Building ignored feng shui principles, and created instant controversy by evoking two knife edges, one pointing towards the British Government House, another towards the HSBC building. After the Bank of China building opened, a series of mishaps occurred, including the death of the Governor,[16] and a downturn in the city's economy. It is alleged that HSBC installed two maintenance cranes in the shape of cannons on the roof, pointing directly at the Bank of China, to defend against the negative energy from the Bank of China building. According to feng shui master Paul Hung, this solved the problem, and HSBC experienced "no harmful results after that."[15]

Lion statues

Main article: HSBC lions
Left lion statue (Stephen)
Right lion statue (Stitt)
The lion statues of HSBC Main Building

When HSBC decided to build its third Headquarters at 1 Queen's Road Central, opened in 1935, it commissioned two bronze lions from Shanghai-based British sculptor W W Wagstaff (d 1977, aged 82). This commission was inspired by two earlier lions that had been ordered for the new Shanghai office opened in 1923. Cast by J W Singer & Sons in the English town of Frome, to a design by Henry Poole RA, these lions had quickly become part of the Shanghai scene, and passers-by would affectionately stroke the lions in the belief that power and money would rub off on them. They became known as Stephen and Stitt: an in-joke. Stephen was named for A G Stephen, formerly Manager Shanghai, and in 1923 the Chief Manager of HSBC, and G H Stitt, the then Manager Shanghai. Stephen is depicted roaring, Stitt quiescent, and again insiders said that this represented the characters of these two famous bankers.

Wagstaff worked with "Shanghai Arts and Crafts" foreman Chou Yin Hsiang who in an interview with John Loch of HSBC's house magazine "Group News" in June 1977[17] recalled that when he first joined Arts and Crafts he worked with Wagstaff for two years to make the lions, without having to learn a word of English: Wagstaff spoke perfect Shanghai dialect. Hunch-backed, Wagstaff was nicknamed "Lao Doo Pei", meaning "Old Hunchback". His son, inevitably, was called "Sau Doo Pei"—"Young Hunchback". Wagstaff had two sons—Don, killed in Naval service in the war, and Alex, killed while interned in Shanghai by the Japanese. Chou Yin Hsiang himself came to Hong Kong in 1935, and by 1977 was the proprietor of Jeh Hsing Metal Works—and still casting bronze for HSBC.

Like the Shanghai lions, the Hong Kong lions became objects of veneration, and focii of the Bank's perceived excellent feng shui. Young couples still bring their toddlers to stroke the paws and noses of the statues hoping for luck and prosperity.

When the 1935 building closed its doors for the last time on 26 June 1981 the Lions had been moved to the annexe on 19 June 1981. Demolition, by China Swiss Engineers, started on 6 July 1981. The lions were temporarily moved on 4 June 1982 to Statue Square, opposite the main entrance. As a mark of the respect the lions were held in, the move to Statue Square, and the move back in 1985, were accompanied by the chairman Sir Michael Sandberg and senior management of the Bank and the placement of the lions both temporarily and in their current locations was made only after extensive consultations with feng shui practitioners.

Their 4-year sojourn in the annexe and Statue Square aside, the lions have only left their positions as guardians of the Des Voeux Road entrance of the Bank once: they were confiscated by the Japanese and sent to Japan to be melted down. Luckily the war ended before this could happen, and the lions were recognised by an American sailor in a dockyard in Osaka in 1945. They were returned a few months later and restored to their original positions in October 1946.

The Hong Kong lions are also called Stephen and Stitt, and the Hong Kong Stephen has bullet or shrapnel scars in its left hind-quarters dating from the fighting in the Battle of Hong Kong. When this pair of lions was used as the model for the pair commissioned for the new UK Headquarters of HSBC in 2002, Zambian-born New Zealand sculptor Mark Kennedy was asked not to reproduce these "war wounds" in the copies. They had to earn their own battle-scars.

The following is a list of bronze copies and re-casts of the HSBC lions:

Various other HSBC branches throughout the world feature small-scaled replicas of these originals, with varying degrees of faithfulness. Other HSBC branches often feature guardian lions to different designs, such as Chinese guardian lions.

Lighting scheme

The HSBC Main Building at night

In 2003, the Hong Kong Tourism Board developed a harbour lighting plan called "A Symphony of Lights",[19] a large-scale multimedia show featuring lighting, laser, music, and occasionally special pyrotechnics effects during festivals, to promote tourism in Hong Kong. The show is based on the illumination of key buildings on the Hong Kong Island side, and is best viewed from the Kowloon side across the Victoria Harbour. The HSBC Hong Kong headquarters building is one of the participating buildings in the show. The building has been installed with 716 intelligent lighting units, including 450 Martin Professional Cyclo 03 colour changing fluorescent fixtures in the glass stairwells, Martin Professional Exterior 600's and Exterior 200 fixtures on five levels, 8 search lights, and over one kilometre of LED lighting around the top. Completed by mid-December 2003, the cost of installation is estimated to be HK$5.5 million.

Intelligent lighting is distributed across six sections of the building:

  1. Vertical Ladder Trusses
  2. Exoskeleton: Inner + Outer
  3. Refuge Floors
  4. Northwest Stairwell
  5. Eastern Stairwells
  6. Roof Building Maintenance Units

HSBC has always aimed to adopt a new lighting scheme because Foster did not pay much attention to the illumination of the building at nighttime.

See also

References

  1. HSBC Building (Hong Kong) at CTBUH Skyscraper Database
  2. HSBC Building (Hong Kong) at Emporis
  3. HSBC Building (Hong Kong) at SkyscraperPage
  4. HSBC Building (Hong Kong) at Structurae
  5. "Foster + Partners – Hongkong and Shanghai Bank Headquarters". Retrieved 26 June 2008.
  6. Lim, Patricia (2002). Discovering Hong Hong's Cultural Heritage. Hong Kong: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-592723-0..
  7. HSBC Headquarters Building (2nd generation) [1886-1933] at gwulo.com
  8. Keith Bradsher (10 September 2012). "Occupy Hong Kong Protesters Forcibly Removed". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  9. Harvard Design School
  10. A flight of fancy becomes a reality
  11. "CBC-TV Doc Zone episode "Superstitious Minds", first broadcast on 30 Oct 2014". CBC-TV Doc Zone with Ann-Marie MacDonald. CBC-TV. 30 October 2014. Retrieved 3 November 2014.
  12. Lee, Kaye W. (11 July 2008). "Kaye's Universe, Feng Shui Wars in Hong Kong, posted 11 July 2008 (blog)". Kaye's Universe, Glimpses into the things Kaye Lee gets up to. Trading, Economics, Law, spirituality, human potential, martial arts, qigong, Feng Shui and others!. Retrieved 3 Nov 2014.
  13. Rubacek, Kay (26 August 2014). "Bad Fengshui Stabs Hong Kong Bank". Vision Times. Retrieved 3 November 2014.
  14. King, Jerry (28 April 2011). "Feng Shui of the HSBC Headquarters Building in Hong Kong". White Dragon Home. Retrieved 17 April 2016.
  15. 1 2 "CBC Doz Zone, Episode "Superstitious Minds", first broadcast 30 October 2014". CBC Doc Zone with Ann-Marie MacDonald. CBC-TV, Canada: CBC-TV. 30 October 2014. Retrieved 3 November 2014.
  16. Severson, Lucky (20 January 2012). "PBS Religion and Ethics Newsweekly episode "Feng Shui", first broadcast on 20 Jan 2012". PBS.org, Religion and Ethics Newsweekly. PBS. Retrieved 3 November 2014.
  17. Hongkong Bank Group News June 1977
  18. "HSBC's luck of the jaw". The Telegraph. 30 December 2002. Retrieved 9 December 2012.
  19. Discover Hong Kong

External links

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