
Proposed legislation aims to accelerate development of the vast cross-border economic zone by dramatically reducing planning procedures
Hong Kong authorities are preparing legislation that could dramatically shorten land-use approval procedures for projects in the Northern Metropolis, reducing processing time from about nine months to as little as two months in a bid to accelerate one of the city’s most ambitious development initiatives.
According to officials familiar with the plan, details of the dedicated legal framework are expected to be unveiled soon, with a central feature aimed at simplifying and speeding up the process required to change land use in development zones.
The reform is intended to remove procedural bottlenecks that developers currently face when seeking approval for projects under the city’s planning system.
Under the existing framework, developers must submit formal applications to the Town Planning Board and undergo a series of consultations and meetings before changes to zoning plans are approved.
The process typically takes around nine months, a timeline that officials believe slows progress on large-scale infrastructure and housing projects.
The proposed measures would allow authorities to compress that timetable significantly, with sources indicating that approvals in designated Northern Metropolis areas could be completed in roughly two months once the streamlined procedures are implemented.
The legislative initiative forms part of a broader effort to speed up construction and investment across the Northern Metropolis, a vast development zone in the northern New Territories near the border with Shenzhen.
First unveiled in two thousand twenty-one, the project covers roughly thirty thousand hectares and is designed to become a major hub for housing, innovation and cross-border economic cooperation.
The development is expected to serve as a central engine of long-term growth, providing large tracts of new land for industry, housing and technology sectors while strengthening Hong Kong’s integration with the Greater Bay Area.
The area is also intended to support the city’s role as an international financial and innovation centre by enabling new clusters of high-value industries and research activity.
Officials say the streamlined approval framework aligns with national economic planning priorities and the city’s strategy to accelerate major infrastructure and urban expansion projects.
By reducing administrative delays, the government hopes to attract greater private investment, encourage faster construction and deliver housing and employment opportunities more quickly.
The Northern Metropolis project is projected to eventually accommodate millions of residents and hundreds of thousands of jobs, positioning it as one of the most significant urban development initiatives in Hong Kong’s modern history.
According to officials familiar with the plan, details of the dedicated legal framework are expected to be unveiled soon, with a central feature aimed at simplifying and speeding up the process required to change land use in development zones.
The reform is intended to remove procedural bottlenecks that developers currently face when seeking approval for projects under the city’s planning system.
Under the existing framework, developers must submit formal applications to the Town Planning Board and undergo a series of consultations and meetings before changes to zoning plans are approved.
The process typically takes around nine months, a timeline that officials believe slows progress on large-scale infrastructure and housing projects.
The proposed measures would allow authorities to compress that timetable significantly, with sources indicating that approvals in designated Northern Metropolis areas could be completed in roughly two months once the streamlined procedures are implemented.
The legislative initiative forms part of a broader effort to speed up construction and investment across the Northern Metropolis, a vast development zone in the northern New Territories near the border with Shenzhen.
First unveiled in two thousand twenty-one, the project covers roughly thirty thousand hectares and is designed to become a major hub for housing, innovation and cross-border economic cooperation.
The development is expected to serve as a central engine of long-term growth, providing large tracts of new land for industry, housing and technology sectors while strengthening Hong Kong’s integration with the Greater Bay Area.
The area is also intended to support the city’s role as an international financial and innovation centre by enabling new clusters of high-value industries and research activity.
Officials say the streamlined approval framework aligns with national economic planning priorities and the city’s strategy to accelerate major infrastructure and urban expansion projects.
By reducing administrative delays, the government hopes to attract greater private investment, encourage faster construction and deliver housing and employment opportunities more quickly.
The Northern Metropolis project is projected to eventually accommodate millions of residents and hundreds of thousands of jobs, positioning it as one of the most significant urban development initiatives in Hong Kong’s modern history.












































