PROJECTING FUTURE HERITAGE: A HONG KONG ARCHIVE

"STAGING THE ARCHIVE" by Architecture Land Initiative (Guillaume Othenin-Girard, Kent Mundle from Alin) and BEAU Architects (Charlotte Lafont-Hugo, Gilles Vanderstocken), photographed by Oliver Yin Law

PROJECTING FUTURE HERITAGE: A HONG KONG ARCHIVE

  • Collateral Event of the 19th International Architecture Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia
  • Exhibition on Public View in Venice from May 10–November 23, 2025
  • Opening Ceremony on 9 May at 12.15 pm
  • Press Tour on 8 May 10.00 am
  • RSVP here 

Hong Kong to Celebrate Its Unsung Public Infrastructures at the 2025 Venice Biennale

Hong Kong is a city far more fascinating—and with much more to teach the world—than its popular image suggests.
"Memory Eggency – The Sonic Life of Urban Memory" by SOSArchitecture and Urban Design Studio, photographed by Oliver Yin Law

"Memory Eggency – The Sonic Life of Urban Memory" by SOSArchitecture and Urban Design Studio, photographed by Oliver Yin Law

This more fascinating Hong Kong is not found in its dazzling skyscrapers that overlook old junk boats crossing Victoria Harbor, in its open-air dai pai dong where global financiers in bespoke suits eat lunch at plastic tables, or in the nostalgic images of neon-drenched Kowloon streets.
Warehouse spaces with archival drawers of academic research on the future heritage of Hong Kong, photographed by Oliver Yin Law

Warehouse spaces with archival drawers of academic research on the future heritage of Hong Kong, photographed by Oliver Yin Law

Rather, this city is found in places the world does not often look: in the extraordinary but unsung public infrastructures that make Hong Kong the singular urban miracle that it is. These infrastructures that have shaped the city in the early postwar decades will be showcased in "Projecting Future Heritage: A Hong Kong Archive," Hong Kong's official exhibition at the Biennale Architettura 2025. The exhibition will reveal how the city's often-overlooked architectural and urban achievements have for decades fulfilled the pressing mandates that cities around the world now face, like combatting climate change, managing extreme density, and maintaining a cultural life for citizens in shared public spaces.
To Kwa Wan Municipal Services Building, photographed by Chris Lu, courtesy of Ying Zhou and Fai Au

To Kwa Wan Municipal Services Building, photographed by Chris Lu, courtesy of Ying Zhou and Fai Au

Responding to Chief Curator Carlo Ratti’s biennale theme “Intelligens. Natural. Artificial. Collective”, the exhibition curators Fai Au, Ying Zhou, and Sunnie S.Y. Lau will highlight the collective intelligens of Hong Kong’s public infrastructures that represent the city’s shifting paradigm. The selected projects include composite buildings, estate centres, market complexes, and public housing—structures designed by local architects that are little documented, studied, or shared internationally. Many of these, including vernacular villages, are on the brink of redevelopment or already closed down, making them the sole specimens of Hong Kong’s future heritage.
Choi Hung Road Municipal Services Building, photographed by Chris Lu, courtesy of Ying Zhou and Fai Au

Choi Hung Road Municipal Services Building, photographed by Chris Lu, courtesy of Ying Zhou and Fai Au

With the premise of cataloguing these representations of the recent past, the exhibition is designed in two distinct portions of the Campo della Tana in Venice: the outdoor courtyard and the former warehouses. Inside the warehouse spaces, visitors will engage with archaeological documentation of an urban cosmology: measured drawings, scaled models, photographs, diagrams, texts, artefacts, and ephemera. On opening the sets of archival drawers, they will discover academic research on the future heritage of Hong Kong.
The site itself is reminiscent of the ancient craft of making ropes used in ships, located within the Venetian Arsenale—the world’s largest pre-modern industrial complex. To underline this connection, the exhibition brings the shifu, or Hong Kong’s bamboo masters, to construct a bamboo scaffold in the outdoor courtyard. Bamboo scaffolding is an ubiquitous—though now embattled—part of Hong Kong and its circular economy, where some built between the post-war era to the turn of the millennium are already slated for replacement. Choreographing the courtyard as a space for a projective future, the temporary scaffold will frame the rich history of Campo della Tana, as well as serve as a backdrop to juxtapose the entrepot cities of Hong Kong and Venice in their shared precarity between the natural and artificial.
Bamboo MockUp, Photographed by Wing Yuen, Designed by Architecture Land Initiative and BEAU Architects, Courtesy of The Curatorial Team

Bamboo MockUp, Photographed by Wing Yuen, Designed by Architecture Land Initiative and BEAU Architects, Courtesy of The Curatorial Team

The exhibition is jointly organised by The Hong Kong Institute of Architects Biennale Foundation (HKIABF) and Hong Kong Arts Development Council (HKADC), with The Hong Kong Institute of Architects (HKIA) as partner. The HKIABF is seeking funding support from the Cultural and Creative Industries Development Agency (CCIDA) for the exhibition.
Event Details 

Exhibition Venue
Campo della Tana, Castello 2126 - 30122 Venice, Italy

Date of Exhibition
10 May – 23 November 2025 

Opening hours
11 am - 7 pm from 10 May to 28 September
10 am - 6 pm from 29 September to 23 November

Opening Ceremony
9 May 2025 12.15 pm
Press Tour
8 May 2025 10.00 am
Closing days
Closed on Mondays
(Except 12 May, 2 June, 21 July, 1 September, 20 October, 17 November)

Official website
http://2025.vbexhibitions.hk/

Social media platforms
https://www.instagram.com/venice.archi.biennale.hk/ 
https://www.facebook.com/VABHK/ 

"Projecting Future Heritage: A Hong Kong Archive" will return to Hong Kong in the fourth quarter of 2026.
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Physical model of front entrance__photographed by Eryn Kam and Holiday Chan_courtesy ofcourtesy of The Curatorial Team of VBHK 2025.jpg

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Ying Zhou_Courtesy of Ying Zhou.JPG

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Fai Au_Photographed by Kitty Suen_Courtesy of Fai Au.JPG

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Sunnie Lau_Courtesy of Sunnie Lau.jpg

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To Kwa Wan Municipal Services Building__photographed by Chris Iu_courtesy of Ying Zhou and Fai Au.jpg

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Bamboo MockUp, Photo by Wing Yuen_Designed by Architecture Land Initiative and BEAU Architects, Courtesy of The Curatorial Team.JPG

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Bamboo MockUp2, Photo by Wing Yuen_Designed by Architecture Land Initiative and BEAU Architects, Courtesy of The Curatorial Team.JPG

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Quarry Bay Municipal Services Building__photographed by Chris Iu_courtesy of Ying Zhou and Fai Au.jpg

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Choi Hung Road Municipal Services Building_photographed by Chris Iu_courtesy of Ying Zhou and Fai Au.jpg

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