Jump to content

Dr Sun Yat-sen Museum: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
mNo edit summary
Sam Li (talk | contribs)
mNo edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Image:HK Caine Rd Sun Yat Sen.jpg|thumb|250px|Dr. Sun Yat-sen Museum]]

'''Dr. Sun Yat-sen Museum''' ({{zh-t|孫中山紀念館}}) is a planned museum in [[Hong Kong]]. It will be located in [[Kom Tong Hall]], at 7 Castle Road, [[Central, Hong Kong|Central]] on [[Mid-Levels]].
'''Dr. Sun Yat-sen Museum''' ({{zh-t|孫中山紀念館}}) is a planned museum in [[Hong Kong]]. It will be located in [[Kom Tong Hall]], at 7 Castle Road, [[Central, Hong Kong|Central]] on [[Mid-Levels]].


Line 21: Line 23:
[[Category:Monuments and memorials in Hong Kong]]
[[Category:Monuments and memorials in Hong Kong]]
[[Category:Mid-levels]]
[[Category:Mid-levels]]

[[zh:甘棠第]]

Revision as of 07:15, 31 August 2006

Dr. Sun Yat-sen Museum

Dr. Sun Yat-sen Museum (Chinese: 孫中山紀念館) is a planned museum in Hong Kong. It will be located in Kom Tong Hall, at 7 Castle Road, Central on Mid-Levels.

History

Kom Tong Hall is a historic building at Mid Levels, Central. It was accorded status Grade II historic building in 1990 by the Antiquities Advisory Board (AAB).

The Hall was built in 1914. It was named after the former owner of the Mansion, Ho Kom-tong, who was a younger brother of the prominent philanthropist Sir Robert Ho Tung. The Ho family is the first Chinese family permitted to live in the Mid Levels in the early colonial period.

In 1971, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints purchased the building and has used it since then.

In October 2002, the Church submitted an application to the Building Authority to demolish the building. The Hong Kong Government reached a consensus with the church in preserving the building after series of negotiations. [1]

It will be converted into the museum, due to open in November 2006.

Reference