The cost for the whole project was estimated at over HK$200 billion, and the Chinese Government was concerned about its impact on the financial reserve of the future Hong Kong SAR Government. Several changes were made to the plan, including the shortening in distance of the two main towers of the Tsing Ma Bridge[1] and the construction of the Airport Railway as a double-track railway. The project ended up costing HK$160.2 billion.[2]
The Programme formally commenced after the signing of a memorandum of understanding between British Prime MinisterJohn Major and Chinese PremierLi Peng in Beijing on 3 September 1991, and lasted eight years in total. It was the most expensive airport project in the world, according to the Guinness World Records. It was the biggest infrastructure programme in Hong Kong's history.
History
Plans to replace the old Kai Tak Airport were drafted after the Second World War. However, for financial and political reasons, the plan was abandoned in 1951 and the Hong Kong Government decided to expand the original airport instead.[3]
With the growth of the economy of Hong Kong during the 1970s, the project reemerged for discussion. The government earmarked Chek Lap Kok, just off the north coast of Lantau Island near Tung Chung, as the designated site for the new airport. However, the plan was shelved in 1983 for economic reasons, as well as the question of Hong Kong's sovereignty and the impending signing of the Sino-British Joint Declaration.[3]
The plan was announced on 11 October 1989 by the then GovernorDavid Wilson, and it was perceived to be part of the government's effort to reinstate confidence in Hong Kong after the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. The public was initially surprised by the huge budget and there were concerns that it would drain much of the public revenue.[4] The programme was completed with the opening of the new Hong Kong International Airport at Chek Lap Kok in July 1998.[3]
The Hong Kong International Airport is the centrepiece of this massive project; it provided the foundation for the other nine core projects of the Airport Core Programme.
Chek Lap Kok was selected as an optimal site due to its development potential. Construction finally started in 1992 and was planned to finish in mid-1997. Chris Patten, the last Governor of Hong Kong, expressed his hope of leaving Hong Kong via the new airport after the transfer of sovereignty of Hong Kong, though this did not materialise. The airport finally came into operation on 6 July 1998, at a cost of around US$20 billion.[5][unreliable source?]
The Airport Railway was built to connect Kowloon Peninsula and Hong Kong Island (over the Western Immersed Tube)[6][7][8] to the airport and the planned new town of northern Lantau. The railway is operated by the MTR Corporation and has two routes: the Airport Express and the Tung Chung line which provides a commuter service linking the new town of Tung Chung to the city. These two lines share the same double-tracks for most of their routes, however, the railway was initially planned to have four tracks along its length. The commuter service offered by the Tung Chung line also provided relief to the overcrowded Tsuen Wan line of the MTR.
With the highest posted speed limit in Hong Kong, at 110 km/h (68 mph) on most of its length, this six-lane motorway links Tung Chung in the west to the Lantau Link in the east, via the north coast of Lantau. A service road, Cheung Tung Road, runs parallel to it between Tung Chung and Yam O.
Reclamation work was needed along the west coast of Kowloon Peninsula to provide land for the expressway, Route 3, as well as supporting infrastructure. The Airport Railway also runs through the reclaimed land of West Kowloon. The reclamation work has increased the area of Kowloon Peninsula by 30%.
This phase required the reclamation of an area of 20 hectares (49 acres) along the waterfront of Central to provide land for the Airport Railway's Hong Kong station. Two ferry piers serving outlying islands as well as a government dockyard had to be relocated to facilitate the work.
The first phase of the new town in Northern Lantau is centred on Tung Chung and was planned to provide housing to 18,000 people. The new town was meant to be a supporting community for the new Hong Kong International Airport, as well as to act as a "gateway" to Hong Kong for visitors. At present, phases I, II and IIIA of the new town have been completed, all around Tung Chung. When all 4 phases are completed, the new town will be home to 320,000 people, covering an area of 830 hectares (2,100 acres) between Tung Chung and the neighbouring area of Tai Ho.
^Thomas Telford Limited (1997), "Hong Kong Airport Railway Western Immersed Tube Tunnel - Planning", Immersed Tunnel Techniques 2. Proceedings of the International Conference Organized by the Institution of Civil Engineers in Association with the Institution of Engineers of Ireland and Held in Cork, Ireland, on 23-24 April 1997