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Exco conditionally approves arts hub funding plan

iconRTHK·HK

2024-07-17 17:14

The Executive Council has conditionally agreed to a funding proposal to allow the cash-strapped West Kowloon arts hub to sell some of its land parcels...
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  Kevin Yeung (right) says the funding plan will help the hub stay afloat for at least 10 years.

  The Executive Council has conditionally agreed to a funding proposal to allow the cash-strapped West Kowloon arts hub to sell some of its land parcels to ease a financial shortfall.

  The West Kowloon Cultural District Authority will be allowed to sell residential developments within Zone 2 of the site and keep all proceeds received from tenders to private developers.

  This means the development of hotels, offices and residential blocks in the zone will no longer be restricted by the Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) only model adopted since 2016.

  Culture minister Kevin Yeung on Wednesday said the plan will help the hub stay afloat for at least a decade.

  “In the past few years, with very great effort of the authority, the BOT tender did not seem to meet with the appetites of the contractors or developers in Hong Kong,” he said.

  “Instead of having a constant stream of income in the many years in future, we are now cashing in for a lump sum upfront, which could help release the financial challenges or the requirement at present.”

  The authority will have to meet certain requirements, including a triennial cap on operating deficits and a cap on the percentage of staff costs in relation to the total annual operating expenditure.

  The body's chairman, Henry Tang, said they can now avoid “drastic” cost-cutting measures such as reducing the number of days each week that the M+ museum is open.

  Tang added that the authority will come up with ways to boost income without adding to the strain on the public coffers.

  “We will continue to operate as we have always done under a discipline that we only spend what we need to spend and we will control our costs diligently and very seriously,” he said.

  “There are ways that I can make more revenue without disrupting the operations of the museums and I will look for ways to do that.”

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