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Chek Lap Kok.


This airport, now under construction off one of Hong Kong's outlying islands Outlying Islands may refer to different things:
  • Outlying Islands, Hong Kong, islands outside mainland New Territories, Kowloon and Hong Kong Island in Hong Kong.
  • Islands District, Hong Kong, a Hong Kong district.
, has much in common with Piano's Kansai and with Foster's much smaller Stansted in that it provides both a sense of place and clear directionality.

Like Kansai (AR November 1994), Hong Kong's new airport at Chek Lap Kok Chek Lap Kok is an island in the western waters of Hong Kong, China. Chek Lap Kok was one of the two islands (the other being Lam Chau) merged together via land reclamation techniques into to the 12.48 km² platform for the current Hong Kong International Airport.  is being built on an artificial island in the sea - and for the same reasons: the local topography topography (təpŏg`rəfē), description or representation of the features and configuration of land surfaces. Topographic maps use symbols and coloring, with particular attention given to the shape and elevations of terrain.  is mountainous moun·tain·ous  
adj.
1. Having many mountains.

2. Resembling a mountain in size; huge: mountainous waves.


mountainous
Adjective

1.
, and the only natural flat areas of land are needed for development. The first phase, to be completed by 1997 when Hong Kong Hong Kong (hŏng kŏng), Mandarin Xianggang, special administrative region of China, formerly a British crown colony (2005 est. pop. 6,899,000), land area 422 sq mi (1,092 sq km), adjacent to Guangdong prov.  is handed back to the Chinese, will cater for 37 million passengers a year, and the full development, scheduled for 2040, will be capable of handling 87 million. The terminal will then be the size of JFK and Heathrow put together.

The parti of the huge building is essentially simple. Land transport connections are on the east side of the terminal, with road-borne traffic arriving at topmost level, and cars and buses departing from runway level. Passengers moving in both directions traverse a grand top-lit volume which cuts through the whole section (like the canyon at Kansai, but more generous in width). Rapid transport rail lines connecting to Hong Kong Island Hong Kong Island is an island in the southern part of Hong Kong, China. It had a population of 1,268,112 and its population density was 15,915/km² in 2006. The island was captured by the United Kingdom in the early 1840s, and the City of Victoria was then established on the island.  and Kowloon set down and collect people within this space.

Arriving passengers use sloping bridges to cross the void from the sheltered road set-down area and from the rapid transport platform to reach the check-in area. From here, they proceed through security control to reach the long concourse that stretches west across the man-made island. In the end, this will be a Y-shaped affair with 50 gates; there will be 39 in the first phase. Passengers from the departure lounges Noun 1. departure lounge - lounge where passengers can await departure
waiting area, waiting room, lounge - a room (as in a hotel or airport) with seating where people can wait

departure lounge n (at airport
 in the concourse go down to the planes along the sloping ramps of the air bridges.

In reverse, passengers find the air-bridge ramps moved to slope down to the arrivals floor of the concourse, from the end of which they descend to the baggage hall, then down again to the base of the great gulch at road level, or across the void by bridge to reach the platform for rapid transport to Hong Kong. Underground shuttle trains run the length of the concourse.

The structure is a prefabricated pre·fab·ri·cate  
tr.v. pre·fab·ri·cat·ed, pre·fab·ri·cat·ing, pre·fab·ri·cates
1. To manufacture (a building or section of a building, for example) in advance, especially in standard sections that can be easily shipped and
 steel frame on a 33 m square grid. Roofs are lightweight steel trussed vaults with continuous central lanterns to bring daylight to the middle of the plan. The vaults curve longitudinally to emphasise the axis of passenger flow.

So for all its great size, the complex should be clear and easy to use. And to build - there are now less than 1000 days until Hong Kong is handed back. The airport and its associated infrastructure projects make up a remarkable swan-song by the colonial administration.
COPYRIGHT 1995 EMAP Architecture
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1995, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Hong Kong airport
Publication:The Architectural Review
Date:Feb 1, 1995
Words:457
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