Old Tai O Police Station
舊大澳警署 | |
General information | |
---|---|
Type | Police station |
Current tenants | Tai O Cultural Relics Hotel |
Completed | 1902 |
Closed | 2002 |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 2 |
Floor area | 1,000 square metres (11,000 sq ft) |
Designations | |
Designated | 17 May 2010 |
Reference no. | 440 |
Old Tai O Police Station | |||||||||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 舊大澳警署 | ||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 旧大澳警署 | ||||||||||||
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The Old Tai O Police Station is a former police station in Hong Kong. It is located on the small hill next to Tai O Ferry Pier,[1] at the south-western tip of Tai O, which can be considered the most westerly point within Hong Kong.[2]
The Tai O Cultural Relics Hotel operates in a social enterprise mode, with over half of the staff being Tai O or Lantau residents.
History
Tai O had long been seen as a strategic harbour area in the Hong Kong region. On 4 August 1855, British naval forces from the China Station defeated a pirate fleet at the Battle of Ty-ho Bay.[3] The police station was built in 1902 with a main duty of combating piracy and smuggling prevalent in the neighbouring waters.[2][3]
On 17 July 1918, Police Sergeant Thomas Cecil Glendinning was shot to death by Constable Teja Singh in the Charge Room of the police station where Sergeant Glendinning and his family were residing. The murder occurred following a hostage situation where Constable Singh had taken Sergeant Glendinning hostage at the station along with his wife and child.[4][3] The incident was resolved after police located Constable Singh who had fled the scene and took his own life.[5]
In 1940, Detective Constable Hing Ip of the Tai O station was shot and killed by robbers while on duty at Tai O.[4]
During the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong, local resistance forces and triad members led by Wong Kei-tsai began a smuggling operation in the area bringing food and salt to Lantau from Mainland China. The Tai O Police Station was briefly captured by local guerrilla forces before being retaken by the Japanese Army.[3]
The number of policemen stationed there increased from an initial six or seven to over 180 in 1983. The station was downgraded to a patrol post in 1996, and was left vacant in 2002.[6]
Higher on the same hill are the Tai O Barracks of the PLA Hong Kong Garrison,[7][8] formerly known before the handover as Naval Coastal Observation Station, Tai O.[9]
Architecture
The police station consists of two 2-storey blocks: a main block and an outhouse block linked by a footbridge at first floor level. The outhouse block has Arts and Crafts architectural features.[2]
Conservation
The Old Tai O Police Station was listed as a Grade III historic building in 1988,[1] and as a Grade II historic building in 2009.[10] In 2008, it was included among the seven buildings in Batch I of the Hong Kong Government's Revitalising Historic Buildings Through Partnership Scheme seeking adaptive reuse of government-owned historic buildings.[11]
In the end, the government accepted the redevelopment proposal of the Hong Kong Heritage Conservation Foundation to convert the building into a boutique hotel. The HKHCF was initially set up under the name Nice Brilliant Limited in December 2007, and changed its name in March 2008. The HKHCF has close ties to Robert Ng's Sino Group, and two of his children sit on its board. Legislator Fernando Cheung accused them of being a "one-man NGO" set up for business purposes rather than social service.[12] The conversion project is planned for completion at the end of 2011, with an estimated cost of HK$64.9 million.[13]
The Old Tai O Police Station was transformed into the boutique, nine room Tai O Heritage Hotel, and is curated and managed by the HKHCF.[8]
See also
- Robert Ng, for debated issues about the Hong Kong Heritage Conservation Foundation Ltd.
- Historic police station buildings in Hong Kong
References
- ^ a b Revitalising Historic Buildings Through Partnership Scheme Old Tai O Police Station Resource Kit
- ^ a b c Brief Information on Proposed Grade 2 Items, pp. 388-389 Archived 2013-02-23 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b c d Sherwood, Peter (1 December 2019). "Dispatch: Wild times: Former Marine Policemen Les Bird and the Tai O Heritage Hotel". arounddb.com. Bay Media Publishing. Retrieved 26 December 2019.
- ^ a b "Provisional List Hong Kong Police Deaths in the Course of Duty (1841-1941)". police.gov.hk. Royal Hong Kong Police Force. 2019. Retrieved 26 December 2019.
- ^ Whitehead, Kate (18 April 2015). "Murder in Tai O: how police officer was gunned down in cold blood by one of his own men in 1918". scmp.com. South China Morning Post. Retrieved 26 December 2019.
- ^ Introduction to 1444 Historic Buildings, p. 392 Archived 2012-10-13 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Map showing the location of Old Tai O Police Station and Tai O Barracks
- ^ a b Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong Branch, July 2012 Newsletter, pp. 6-8
- ^ Gwulo: Old Hong Kong. Military Sites of the PLA Hong Kong Garrison
- ^ Antiquities and Monuments Office: List of the Historic Buildings in Building Assessment (as of 23 November 2011) Archived 22 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Conserve and Revitalise Hong Kong Heritage: Batch I of Revitalisation Scheme
- ^ Ng, Joyce; Wong, Olga (8 October 2008), "Developer sets up NGO to bid for heritage site: Sino Land wants to turn Old Tai O Police Station into boutique hotel", South China Morning Post
- ^ Batch I of Revitalisation Scheme: Result of selection, Commissioner for Heritage's Office, Development Bureau, 17 February 2008, retrieved 17 March 2010