① Hong Kong’s government plans to spend HK$624 billion ($80 billion), equivalent to half its fiscal reserves, to reclaim land for artificial islands that’ll help ease its housing crunch.
② The price tag for the so-called Lantau Tomorrow Vision includes costs for reclamation, infrastructure and improving transportation. More than a third, or HK$256 billion, will go toward building artificial islands spanning 1,000 hectares off Lantau Island.
③ The ambitious plan was first pitched by the city’s Chief Executive Carrie Lam as part of her annual policy address last year, when she said the government would realize the vision within 20 to 30 years.
④ Surrounded by water on three sides and Chinese mainland on the other, Hong Kong faces a severe shortage of land supply that has pushed property prices to among the least affordable in the world.
⑤ The government would be able to finance the project because costs would be spread out over a long period, Michael Wong, secretary for development, said at a briefing Tuesday.
⑥ The Hong Kong Institute of Surveyors estimates that the sale of commercial and residential land in the artificial islands could yield HK$970 billion to HK$1.14 trillion of revenue.
② The price tag for the so-called Lantau Tomorrow Vision includes costs for reclamation, infrastructure and improving transportation. More than a third, or HK$256 billion, will go toward building artificial islands spanning 1,000 hectares off Lantau Island.
③ The ambitious plan was first pitched by the city’s Chief Executive Carrie Lam as part of her annual policy address last year, when she said the government would realize the vision within 20 to 30 years.
④ Surrounded by water on three sides and Chinese mainland on the other, Hong Kong faces a severe shortage of land supply that has pushed property prices to among the least affordable in the world.
⑤ The government would be able to finance the project because costs would be spread out over a long period, Michael Wong, secretary for development, said at a briefing Tuesday.
⑥ The Hong Kong Institute of Surveyors estimates that the sale of commercial and residential land in the artificial islands could yield HK$970 billion to HK$1.14 trillion of revenue.