
Tang Shing-bor has reportedly sold off the Kings Hotel
Just over a year after Kailong Real Estate Investment sold off a former hotel that it had converted into a co-working centre in Shanghai, the Warburg Pincus-backed firm is said to have bought the Kings Hotel in Hong Kong’s Wanchai for about HK$1.35 billion ($173 million), with plans to renovate the 193-room property into a commercial building.
A Kailong fund has purchased the 86,000 square foot (7,990 square metre) building from billionaire property investor Tang Shing-bor, according to an account in the Hong Kong Economic Times. The selling price equates to HK$15,600 ($1,997) per square foot for the three-star hotel at 297-305 Jaffe Road.
Kailong May Turn Another Hotel into a Co-Working Hub
The news follows a report last month that an unnamed group was bidding HK$1.4 billion ($181 million) to purchase the asset en bloc, with intentions to convert the hotel into a co-working centre – the latest in a series of properties to be repurposed as flexible offices in Hong Kong.

KaiLong founder Hei Ming Cheng (right) may have another deal to celebrate soon
With its reported purchase of Kings Hotel, Hong Kong-managed, Shanghai-based Kailong may be looking to replicate the success of an earlier conversion project on the mainland. Kailong acquired the former Laurel Hotel, a run-down, three-star hotel in Shanghai in March 2015 through its vehicle the KaiLong Greater China Real Estate Fund.
The company then refurbished the 12-storey building near People’s Square, repositioned it as a chic office tower called The Konnect, and succeeded in leasing 10,000 square feet of space to co-working giant WeWork. Last November, Kailong doubled its equity investment in the property by flipping the 11,000 square foot building for a sum in excess of RMB 500 million ($74 million).
Hong Kong Buildings Get Flexible
The seller of Kings Hotel, best known as a retail property tycoon, has also been cashing in on the co-working trend in Hong Kong. In July, Tang sold the Wave in Kowloon East’s Kwun Tong area to Bank of China (Hong Kong) Asset Management, after converting the 11-storey former industrial workshop into an event and co-working centre.
Hotel LKF in the Lan Kwai Fong nightlife district closed its doors in the same month for renovation into a co-working facility, with WeWork said to be leasing out the nine-story building. Also joining the flexible office fray is Spaces, a unit of serviced office giant IWG (formerly Regus), which is reportedly preparing to launch a 20-storey co-working tower in Sheung Wan.
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