International Commerce Centre


The International Commerce Centre is a 108-storey, commercial skyscraper completed in 2010 in West Kowloon, Hong Kong. It is a part of the Union Square project on top of Kowloon Station. It was the 4th tallest building in the world when its construction was completed in 2010. As of June 2019, it is the world's 12th tallest building by height, world's ninth tallest building by number of floors, as well as the tallest building in Hong Kong and also the 6th tallest building within China.
Notable amenities include The Ritz-Carlton, Hong Kong hotel and an observatory called Sky100.
The ICC faces the second-tallest skyscraper in Hong Kong, the 2 International Finance Centre directly across Victoria Harbour in Central, Hong Kong Island. IFC was also developed by Sun Hung Kai Properties, along with another major Hong Kong developer, Henderson Land.

Development

and Sun Hung Kai Properties, Hong Kong's metro operator and largest property developer respectively, were responsible for the development of this skyscraper. Known in development as Union Square Phase 7, its current name was officially announced in 2005. The International Commerce Centre was completed in phases from 2007 to 2010. The tower opened in 2011, with the Ritz-Carlton opening in late March and the observatory in early April.
The height had been scaled back from earlier plans due to regulations that did not allow buildings to be taller than the surrounding mountains. The original proposal for this building was called Kowloon Station Phase 7 and it was designed to be tall with 102 floors. It would have risen over the then-current tallest in Hong Kong, 2 International Finance Centre.
The tower was designed by the American architectural firm Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates in association with Wong & Ouyang
Construction work was temporarily halted on 13 September 2009, due to an lift shaft accident that killed six workers.

Floor count

The building has 108 floors above ground and 4 below ground. Due to prevalence of tetraphobia in Hong Kong, floors that would have included the number "4" were omitted. Therefore, it is marketed as a 118-storey building.

Floor directory

In its basement is the Elements shopping mall, which opened in October 2007.
A five-star hotel, The Ritz-Carlton, Hong Kong occupies floors 102 to 118. The world's highest swimming pool and bar can be found on the top 118th floor.
The building also contains an observation deck on the 100th floor called Sky100 which opened to the public in April 2011. The 101st floor is leased to a number of five-star restaurants.
The rest of the building, except the lobby, contains class-A office space.
118th floorSwimming pool and Ozone in The Ritz-Carlton, Hong Kong
Floor M6Mechanical floor
106th–117th floor The Ritz-Carlton, Hong Kong
Floor M5Mechanical Floor
102nd–103rd floorThe Ritz-Carlton, Hong Kong
Floor R4, M4-1, M4-2, M4-3Refuge and mechanical floors
101st floor101 dining restaurant
100th floorSky100 Observatory
78th–99th floor High zone office floors
Floor R3, M3-1, M3-2Refuge and mechanical floors
50th–77th floor High zone office floors
48th–49th floorSky lobbies
Floor R2, M2-1, M2-2Refuge and mechanical floors
12th–47th floor Low zone office floors
Floor M1-1, M1-2, M1-3, M1-5, R1Refuge and mechanical floors
10th–11th floorLow zone office floors
8th–9th floor Lobby
1st–3rd floorElements shopping mall
B4th–B1st floorCar park

The ICC Light and Music Show

The LED light show set a new Guinness World Record for the “largest light and sound show on a single building” using a total of 50,000 square metres on two facades of the International Commerce Centre.
The ICC Light and Music Show is designed by lighting designer Hirohito Totsune who already designed the lighting system of the Tokyo Skytree. Similar to the daily “A Symphony of Lights Show” in Victoria Harbour, the ICC Light and Music Show creates a theme and storyline using light and music elements.

Gallery