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KE Spotlight

  • Faculty Knowledge Exchange Awards 2018

    Faculty Knowledge Exchange Awards 2018

    The annual Faculty Knowledge Exchange (KE) Awards recognise each Faculty’s outstanding KE accomplishment that has made demonstrable economic, social or cultural impacts to benefit the community, business/industry, or partner organisations. Results of the 2018 Faculty KE Awards are now available.

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  • HKU research team calls for environmental conservation of Hong Kong quarries

    HKU research team calls for environmental conservation of Hong Kong quarries

    An HKU research team led by Dr Poon Sun-wah, Adjunct Professor of the Department of Real Estate and Construction, spoke of the history and heritage of quarrying in Hong Kong. An exhibition entitled "The Legend of Rocks: Destiny of Quarries" is now showing at the City Gallery in Central until September 10. Currently, the only quarry remaining in Hong Kong is the Lam Tei Quarry, meeting less than 10% of local demand. While the Government is interested in developing new quarries to supply local needs, the research team believes that environmental conservation should be fully considered in the planning stage and be included in the developmental blueprint with reference to foreign conservation experience.

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  • HKU invents world’s first Smart Address Plate System

    HKU invents world’s first Smart Address Plate System

    HKU developed the world’s first Smart Address Plate System (SAP), which is more accurate in navigating than the widely used GPS.  Professor Anthony Yeh, Chair Professor of the Department of Urban Planning and Design in HKU, explained that while GPS has an average error of 10 to 30 meters and does not work well indoors, SAP can pinpoint the exact location of the user, allowing the user to find his way to both outdoor and indoor destinations easily via a single mobile app. It also reduces the error to a range of 1 to 3 meters. The system consists of three components: the smart address plate with a Bluetooth proximity sensing device, smart address coding system and a smart address plate management system.

    Compared to other navigation systems available on the market, SAP is the most economic option.  Installing SAP in a 30,000 square-foot, five-storey mall with 300 shops would cost around HK$700,000 and on average HK$2,800 for each shop. The team is filing a patent related to this new invention, and is discussing with the government, major shopping malls and office buildings regarding its application so that Hong Kong can become the first city in the world to use this set of innovative system.

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  • HKU Urban Studies and Planning team offers solution to a GPS blind spot in multilevel road networks

    HKU Urban Studies and Planning team offers solution to a GPS blind spot in multilevel road networks

    Present vehicle navigation system that uses GPS has a long existing problem in determining which road level a vehicle has entered, especially for flyovers parallel to the ground level. Professor Anthony Yeh Gar-On’s research team at the Department of Urban Planning and Design solved the problem with their Angle Difference Method which can instantly identify whether a vehicle has entered a flyover or is still on the ground level. It works with an ordinary smartphone that can be put anywhere at any angle in the vehicle with a plugged in or installed onboard diagnostic (OBD) device. The invention won a gold medal award at the Geneva International Exhibition of Inventions. The team is in talks with major digital map providers to apply the patented method into their navigation systems. 

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  • Making Our City More Walkable for All

    Making Our City More Walkable for All

    The HKUrbanLab, the research and knowledge exchange arm of the Faculty of Architecture at The University of Hong Kong, is working with Civic Exchange and the Hong Kong Council of Social Service on a project called ‘Walking with Wheels’, aimed at finding the best barrier-free routes for people in wheelchairs and those with prams and trolleys. Watch the full video.

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  • HKU holds First International Lighthouse Symposium: Saving Our Maritime Icons – A Regional Overview of Historic Lighthouses

    HKU holds First International Lighthouse Symposium: Saving Our Maritime Icons – A Regional Overview of Historic Lighthouses

    The HKU Department of Real Estate and Construction holds a symposium "Saving Our Maritime Icons - A Regional Overview of Historic Lighthouses" today (October 20) on the development of modern lighthouses in the region in the nineteenth and early twentieth century. Dr Poon Sun-wah, adjunct professor in the department, and his research team spent three years studying the history of modern lighthouse development in Hong Kong and the region, including Taiwan and Singapore. Mrs Felicity Somers Eve, the great-granddaughter of engineer David Marr Henderson who had designed and supervised more than 30 lighthouses along the region’s coast, will talk about her great grandfather’s life and work. Pictures of the diary of Charles Edwin Nicholas, the first senior keeper at Gap Rock Lighthouse, will be made public for the first time. Heritage lighthouses in Hong Kong include Cape D'Aguilar Lighthouse, the oldest surviving one in the territory - completed in 1875 - and five others including two at Green Island, Cape Collinson, Waglan Island and Tang Lung Chau. All are more than 100 years ago old. 

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  • Knowledge Exchange Awards 2017

    Knowledge Exchange Awards 2017

    The annual Faculty Knowledge Exchange (KE) Awards recognise each Faculty’s outstanding KE accomplishment that has made demonstrable economic, social or cultural impacts to benefit the community, business/industry, or partner organisations. Results of the 2017 Faculty KE Awards are now available.

    Read More