
I often wonder whether my architectural career peaked in 2006 – not because I had already accomplished a lot or designed my masterpiece – but because that was the year I resigned from Gehry Partners. As exciting as it was to return to Hong Kong, I left the world’s most famous architectural practice wondering if I would ever collaborate on projects as high-profile, emotionally striking and complicated as those I had worked on in my five formative years there.
Hongkongers should be tremendously proud and not just because Opus was built. Gehry’s design partner then was Hong Kong-born Edwin Chan, who worked as Gehry’s lead designer for 25 years, helping to realise iconic works from the Guggenheim Bilbao to the Fondation Louis Vuitton. Chan’s success is a testament to Hong Kong’s ability to produce exceptional talent. The question is whether the city can accommodate out-of-the-box thinking and, accordingly, give its architects room to experiment.
Indeed, Opus and Chan were not Gehry’s only connections to Hong Kong. The luxury residence offered only a glimpse of what he could have built in the city.