Lippo Centre, Hong Kong
| Lippo Centre | |
|---|---|
| 力寶中心 | |
The Lippo Centre twin towers, with walls intended to suggest koalas climbing a tree--thus the reasoning behind the nickname--"The Koala Tree" |
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| General information | |
| Type | Office |
| Location | Hong Kong |
| Coordinates | 22°16′45.51″N 114°9′48.39″E / 22.2793083°N 114.1634417°ECoordinates: 22°16′45.51″N 114°9′48.39″E / 22.2793083°N 114.1634417°E |
| Construction started | 1987 |
| Completed | 1988 |
| Opening | 1988 |
| Height | |
| Roof |
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| Top floor |
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| Technical details | |
| Floor count | 48 |
| Design and construction | |
| Owner | Lippo Group |
| Architect | Paul Rudolph |
| Developer | Alan Bond |
| References | |
| [1] | |
The Lippo Centre (Chinese: 力寶中心; Jyutping: lik6 bou2 zung1 sam1) is a pair of twin office towers in Hong Kong, previously known as the Bond Center (Chinese: 奔達中心; Jyutping: ban1 daat6 zung1 sam1). The buildings are located at 89 Queensway, in Admiralty on Hong Kong Island. They were taken over by the Lippo Group after the collapse of the Bond Corporation. The height of the taller tower is 186m.
The buildings, completed in 1988, were dubbed "The Koala Tree" because they resemble koalas clutching a tree. The buildings were designed by American architect Paul Rudolph,[2] who strove to relieve the traditional severity of skyscraper walls by designing clusters of obtruding windows.
Hong Kong artist Gerard D'Henderson, who designed the walls in the Hong Kong Mandarin Oriental Hotel, enriched the lobby with dramatic bas-relief murals.
Lippo Centre is featured in the Golden City track in Burnout 3.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Central Plaza at SkyscraperPage, Accessed 2007-09-15
- ^ Lippo Centre
[edit] External links
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