HONG KONG 2004
Land, Public Works and Utilities
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Introduction
Organisational Framework
Review of the Town Planning Ordinance
Hong Kong Planning Standards and Guidelines
Territorial Development Strategy
Sub-regional Development Strategies
District Planning
Enforcement
Urban Renewal
Planning Studies
Urban Development Areas
New Towns and Rural Townships
Building Development
Land Administration
Land Acquisition
Land Disposal
Land Management and Lease Enforcement
Government Conveyancing
Survey and Mapping
Land Registration
Drainage Services
Civil Engineering
Water Supplies
Electricity
Gas
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Land Disposal
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Land in Hong Kong is leased or otherwise held from the Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. New leases of land are usually granted for a term of 50 years from the date of grant at a premium and subject to the payment from the date of grant of an annual rent equivalent to three per cent of the rateable value of the property at that date, adjusted in step with any changes in the rateable value thereafter.

While government land is usually sold by public auction, sale by public tender is also adopted in certain circumstances, such as petrol filling station sites, or where the Government wishes to examine in advance detailed proposals, as in the tender of the former Marine Police Station site in Tsim Sha Tsui for commercial development which involved heritage preservation.

In appropriate cases, land may be made available by private treaty grant. In these direct grant cases, the premium charged varies from nominal (as in the case of non-profit making schools) to full market value (as in the case of public utility companies).

In October 2003, the Government released a statement on the implementation and consolidation of housing policy. This included the decision to resume the sale of land (suspended in November 2002) through the Application List System whereby interested parties make guaranteed bids for sites on the Application List in order to trigger an auction or tender.

During the year, five residential sites (with a total area of 5.86 hectares) and 10 sites for petrol filling stations (with a total area of 1.39 hectares) were sold at premium amounting to $18.89 billion.

In addition to land supply from the Government, existing privately held land leases can be amended, normally at a premium, on lease-holders' initiatives to provide for a more intensive or different type of development in accordance with the prevailing planning intentions. These amendments are effected by either lease modification or land exchange. Other exchanges of land may be entered into by the Government for various reasons ranging from the rectification of lot boundaries to the implementation of a town planning layout. During the year, 123 transactions involving lease modification and land exchange were concluded, involving a total of 363.48 hectares.

 

 
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