Rednaxela Terrace

Rednaxela Terrace (Chinese: 列拿士地臺; Liht-nàh-sih Deih-tòih) is a pedestrian-only street in Mid-Levels, Hong Kong.

A road sign of Rednaxela Terrace
José Rizal's business card, showing his residence at No.2 Rednaxela Terrace

It is 63 metres (207 ft) long and junctions Shelley Street to the west and Peel Street to the east.[1]

Name

Although there are no official conclusions to the origin of the name, it is believed that the road was part of the property owned by a Mr. Alexander, and Rednaxela is an understandable transposition of the English name Alexander, since the Chinese language was typically written right-to-left at the time.[2][3] Most of the naming errors in Hong Kong are a result of incorrect transliterations. Another explanation is that the name is linked to abolitionist Robert Alexander Young, who was known to have used the name Rednaxela in his 1829 work Ethiopian Manifesto.[1] Chinese transliteration followed suit and was adopted by the neighbourhood, and the government never made any further alterations.[1]

History

From December 1891 to June 1892, the Filipino revolutionary and national hero José Rizal lived with his family at Number 2, Rednaxela Terrace, then working as an eye clinician in Hong Kong. The Hong Kong government erected a commemorative plaque in 2004 on the intersection of Rednaxela Terrace and Shelley Street to honour Rizal.[1][3]

Residential buildings

ACTS Rednaxela

Rednaxela Terrace only has a few residential buildings, with Caine Road on its north, Central-Mid-levels Escalator and Jamia Mosque on its east,

Rednaxela Terrace is considered a convenient location for local residents and expatriates. No. 1 Rednaxela Terrace is a building called The Rednaxela developed by Yu Tai Hing Company Ltd, which was completed in 1998.[4]

No. 8 Rednaxela Terrace is named as ACTS Rednaxela and was developed by Goldig Investment Group (協利集團). Carl Gouw (吳家耀), representing ACTS and the developer, collaborated with Gary Chang and EDGE Design Institute on designing the building.[5] It received a Design For Asia Merit award from Hong Kong Design Centre[6] and was featured in Apple TV’s Home.[7] Goldig sold ACTS Rednaxela in 2012 for HK$ 200m and ACTS continued with the serviced apartments operations.[8] The building model is exhibited at M+ museum of West Kowloon Cultural District.[9]

References

  1. "列拿士地臺的故事". Headline Daily (in Chinese).
  2. Yanne, Andrew; Heller, Gillis (2009). Signs of a Colonial Era. Hong Kong University Press. p. 143. ISBN 9789622099449.
  3. "Stories behind Hong Kong street names: Rednaxela Terrace and its famous resident". South China Morning Post.
  4. hongkonghomes.com. "The Rednaxela". hongkonghomes.com. Retrieved 2021-06-16.
  5. "2011- ACTS Rednaxela Serviced Apartment". EDGE DESIGN INSTITUTE LTD. Retrieved 2021-06-16.
  6. "Awards". EDGE DESIGN INSTITUTE LTD. Retrieved 2021-06-16.
  7. "Nano-Scale: Gary Chang Explores Compact Living and The Future of Dense Cities". ArchDaily. 2020-10-16. Retrieved 2021-06-16.
  8. "中環服務式住宅全幢售逾2億 - 香港文匯報". paper.wenweipo.com. Retrieved 2021-06-16.
  9. "Model, ACTS Rednaxela Serviced Apartments (2006–2011), Hong Kong (2011, made 2015) - Gary Chang, EDGE Design Institute | Objects | M+". www.mplus.org.hk. Retrieved 2021-11-17.

22.281032°N 114.1491609°E / 22.281032; 114.1491609

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