International Commerce Centre

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It is likely to contain information of a speculative nature and the content may change as the building approaches completion.
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International Commerce Centre is a 118 story, 484 m (1,573 feet) skyscraper under construction in West Kowloon, Hong Kong; as part of the Union Square project built on top of the MTR Kowloon Station. The development is owned and jointly developed by MTR Corporation Limited and Sun Hung Kai Properties (SHKP); Hong Kong's metro operator and largest property developer respectively.

Its formal development name is Union Square Phase 7; and the name International Commerce Centre was officially announced in 2005. Upon completion by 2010, the skyscraper will become Hong Kong's tallest building and the fourth tallest building in the world, after Shanghai World Financial Center, Chicago Spire and the Burj Dubai complex.

SHKP, together with another major Hong Kong developer, Henderson Land, also co-developed the current record holder for Hong Kong's tallest building, 2 IFC; located directly across Victoria Harbour in Central, Hong Kong Island.

[edit] Development

A view of Union Square from the Peak
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A view of Union Square from the Peak

The height has been scaled back from earlier plans due to regulations that didn't allow buildings to be taller than the surrounding mountains. The original proposal for this building was called Kowloon Station Phase 7 and it was supposed to be 102 floors and 574 m tall. However, the roof is still set to reach 484 m (1574 feet), taller than the roof of the proposed Freedom Tower in New York, though shorter than the roofs of the Shanghai World Financial Center and 400 North Lake Shore Drive. It will tower 60 m over the current tallest in Hong Kong, 2 IFC.

The tower was designed by the American architectural firm Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates (KPF) in association with Wong & Ouyang (HK) Ltd.

A five-star hotel operated by Ritz-Carlton was originally going to occupy the top 15 floors, however this plan has been discontinued due to the fact the top of the tower will be swaying approximately 2m from side to side during a typhoon.

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