Murray Building (Chinese: 美利大廈) was a government office building on 22 Cotton Tree Drive, Central, Hong Kong. It has 27 stories and housed some of the key decision making bureaus of the Hong Kong government.
The building was auctioned off for re-development into a hotel by The Lands Department in December 2011, after the government bureaus have moved to the Central Government Complex, Tamar.
As of March 2016, the building is under reconstruction and will be re-purposed to a hotel project. It is announced in October the property will be renamed to The Murray, a Niccolo Hotel, Hong Kong, managed by Marco Polo Hotels.
Located in a prime spot, Murray Building was designed by the then Public Works Department and completed in 1969. This 27-storey building was the tallest government building at that time.
Murray Building was designed with its windows meticulously oriented to avoid intrusion of excessive direct sunlight. This design won the Certificate of Merit of the Energy Efficient Building Award in 1994. Another outstanding design feature of Murray Building, which is surrounded by major roads on all sides, is its vehicular entrance which is neatly knitted into the steep Cotton Tree Drive.
Murray Building became vacant upon relocation of its current offices to the new Central Government Complex at Tamar by end-2011. Given its prime Central location close to the Peak Tram Garden Road lower terminus and Hong Kong Park, coupled with the great demand for high-end hotels in the area, Murray Building has high potential to be converted into a hotel. With appropriate conversion and associated supporting facilities, the new hotel will be a popular destination for visitors. Conversion is also an environmentally preferred option.
In his policy address, Chief Executive Donald Tsang said the government will retain ownership of the 27-story building, built in 1969, even after it is converted into a 300-room hotel. But development officials on 2 March 2010 said the building, as well as its title-related rights, will be put up for tender next year, with the successful bidder given a 50-year ownership lease. Quizzed on the apparent about-face, officials said the latest proposal is "current policy." Central and Western District Council chairman Chan Tak-chor expressed outrage at the government's decision, taken without public consultation.