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Sunning Plaza

Coordinates: 22°16′41″N 114°11′7″E / 22.27806°N 114.18528°E / 22.27806; 114.18528
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Sunning Plaza
新寧大廈
Sunning Plaza in 2013 before demolition.
Map
General information
TypeOffice building
LocationCauseway Bay
CountryHong Kong
Coordinates22°16′41″N 114°11′7″E / 22.27806°N 114.18528°E / 22.27806; 114.18528
Opened1982
Renovated2003
Demolished2013
Technical details
Floor count30
Design and construction
Architect(s)I. M. Pei
Entrance of Sunning Plaza

Sunning Plaza (Chinese: 新寧大廈) was a 30-storey office building in Causeway Bay, Hong Kong. This and the adjacent 19-storey residential building Sunning Court (Chinese: 新寧閣) were the first of only two projects in Hong Kong of Chinese-American architect I. M. Pei,[1] the other one being the Bank of China Tower. They were located in the area bounded by Hysan Avenue, Sunning Road and Hoi Ping Road. The two buildings were completed in 1982, and Sunning Court was renovated in 2003.

There was a large open space around the buildings, creating an "urban oasis" for the dense Causeway Bay area. A scene of John Woo's movie A Better Tomorrow was filmed at the space before the entrance of Sunning Plaza.

Although the buildings were relatively young, the landlord Hysan Development announced its plan to redevelop the two buildings into a bigger retail and office complex in 2013,[2] and the demolition started late the same year. The company has a history of tearing down young building. Hennessy Centre, completed in 1981 and owned by the same company, was torn down in 2006 for development of Hysan Place.

I. M. Pei once told Hong Kong architect Raymond Fung Wing-kee in 1992 that Hong Kong developers like to commission him to design, but do not quite like his design.[3]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ [Moser, Moira. "The Inside Story: How Structure and Services Impact Office Design in Tall Buildings." Second Century of the Skyscraper. Springer US, 1988. 209-227.
  2. ^ Lo Wei (1 October 2013). "Causeway Bay to lose an urban oasis as I.M. Pei's Sunning Plaza faces wrecking ball". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 4 May 2017.
  3. ^ 馮永基 (24 April 2015). "愧對貝聿銘". ET Net. Retrieved 4 May 2017.