Mr. Neil Mallon Bush is a Co-Owner of Triumph Energy Group Limited. Mr. Bush serves as the President of ATX Oil. He co-founded Ignite! Learning, Inc. in 1999. He has over 30 years of experience in energy related businesses and international business development. He began his career in 1980 with Amoco Production Company (now BP) in Denver, Colorado. Later in the 1980's he formed oil companies which explored oil resources in various states in the United States of America
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Karl-Thomson Securities Company Limited operates as a subsidiary of Karl Thomson Holdings Limited.
27/F Fortis Tower
77-79 Gloucester Road
Wan Chai,
Hong Kong
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Lippo Centre (traditional Chinese: 力寶中心; simplified Chinese: 力宝中心; Jyutping: lik6 bou2 zung1 sam1; pinyin: Lìbǎo Zhōngxīn), previously known as the Bond Centre (traditional Chinese: 奔達中心; simplified Chinese: 奔达中心; Jyutping: ban1 daat6 zung1 sam1), is a twin-tower skyscraper complex completed in 1988 at 89 Queensway, in Admiralty on Hong Kong Island in Hong Kong, China. Tower I is 172 m (564.3 ft) with 44 storeys, and Tower II is 186 m (610.2 ft) with 48 storeys.[7]
History
The Lippo Centre is a landmark development located in the heart of Admiralty comprising approximately 1.3 million sq.ft. in two office towers with a retail podium element situated on the ground floors and a small basement car park.[7][8]On completion in late 1987 Savills Investment Management began managing the Lippo Centre.[8] Since 1988 the landmark has been riddled with spectacular corporate collapses in its ownership.[7][9] Relatives of the Singapore-based Kwee Liong Tek family had a majority consortium interest in the construction from its conception[citation needed], later selling their majority interest half-way through construction to British-born Australian business tycoon Alan Bond, who went bankrupt four years later with the collapse of Bond Corporation.[7][9] It has had several corporate ownership failures since and was eventually taken over by Peregrine Investments Holdings who also faced financial collapse, and the Indonesian-backed Lippo Group who are the largest single owner of the building.[7][8][9] Local feng shui consultants have suggested the building has bad feng-shui based on the C-shaped glass-walled extrusions (often referred to locally as resembling koalas clinging to a tree), although Peregrine's own feng-shui consultant gave the towers a clean bill of health.[9]
Architecture
The octagonal buildings, clad with a dark blue refractive glass curtain wall,[7] were designed by American architect Paul Rudolph who was working at the time as a design consultant for Wong & Ouyang.[7][10] The buildings' main construction contractor was Hip Hing Construction.In 1988, Rudolph wrote: "The aesthetic intent is to...give the building 'presence' when seen at a great distance, from the middle distance, and from close distance, and from close hand. At the same time, it is intended that the building inhabit the sky, and become dematerialized by reflecting the ever changing light."[7]
The late muralist-artist Gerard D'Alton Henderson, who designed the walls in the Hong Kong Mandarin Oriental Hotel, enriched the lobby with dramatic bas-relief murals.[11]
The Lippo Centre is connected to the Central Elevated Walkway network of footbridges.
The Savill Garden is an enclosed part of Windsor Great Park in England, created by Sir Eric Savill in the 1930s. It is managed by the Crown Estate and charges an entrance fee.[1] The garden includes woodland, ornamental areas and a pond. The attractions include the New Zealand Garden, the Queen Elizabeth Temperate House and trees planted by members of the Royal Family. In June 2010, a new contemporary rose garden designed by Andrew Wilson and Gavin McWilliam of Wilson McWilliam Studio [2] was opened by Queen Elizabeth II.[3]
Eric Savill (1895–1980) was the grandson of Alfred Savill the founder of a large firm of estate agents and was involved in managing Windsor Great Park from 1930 to 1970, being Director of Gardens from 1962 to 1970. He opened the Savill Garden to the public in 1951 and left it as a heritage to the nation.[4]
In June 2006, a specially designed new visitor centre, the Savill Building by Glenn Howells Architects[5] was opened. The timber for the floor and roof came from the Windsor Estate.[6]
The Savill Gardens and the nearby Valley Gardens are Grade I listed on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.[7]
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