Blake Pier at Stanley
Type | Pleasure Pier |
---|---|
Locale | Stanley, Hong Kong. |
Characteristics | |
History |
Blake Pier at Stanley (Chinese: 赤柱卜公碼頭) is a public pier in Stanley, Hong Kong. The name originally referred to Blake Pier, Central, a ferry pier in Central, Hong Kong. The pier was named after Sir Henry Arthur Blake, the twelfth governor of Hong Kong. It was originally located at the site of the Central Reclamation Phase 1 project.
The top structure of the pier was later transferred to the open-air oval theatre in Morse Park, in between Wong Tai Sin and Lok Fu, Kowloon. In 2006, the structure was once again transferred next to the Murray House in Stanley, itself dismantled brick by brick and relocated from Central.[1][2] The pier was recommissioned in Stanley on 31 July 2007.
3D Laser Scanning Technology in digital recording of structures was applied to capture the 3D images of the roof structure.[3] The pier has one kai-to route travelling between Aberdeen and Po Toi Island, via the pier operated by Tsui Wah Ferry.[4][5]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Details of the history of the Blake Pier and its pavilion were given in Wong C.T., Ma K.Y., Leung M.K., and Liu K.M. (2007), "The Blake Pier Pavilion: Just a Memory?" Paper presented at the HKIE/IStructE Joint Structural Division Annual Seminar 2007 Archived 2009-11-27 at the Wayback Machine in Hong Kong, 16 May 2007, and a simplified version was published as Wong C.T., Leung M.K., Liu K.M., and Ma, K.Y. (2007), "The Blake Pier Pavilion: Just a Memory?"Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-02-07. Retrieved 2009-07-10.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)" in The Structural Engineers, Vol. 85(20)[dead link ], pp. 38-43. - ^ The Blake Pier
- ^ How surveyors use 3D Laser Scanning Technology in digital recording of structures Archived September 29, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, The Hong Kong Institute of Surveyors (issued on 17 January 2007)
- ^ Between Aberdeen & Po Toi Island (via Stanley Blake Pier) Archived February 7, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Stanley