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Golden Palace is New Hong Kong Tourist Attraction
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=157BAD4:A6F02AD83191E1600408940D4976DBC79574F7DCC14957C0 Showroom, where all
furniture, fittings are made from gold or covered with gold, is dream
of entrepreneur who came to Hong Kong as a poor illegal immigrant 30
years ago Hong Kong's newest tourist attraction is the so-called "Gold
Palace" - a showroom where all furniture and fittings are made from
gold or covered with gold. It is the fulfillment of a dream for an
entrepreneur who came to Hong Kong as a poor, illegal immigrant three
decades ago. Claudia Blume reports from VOA's Asia News Center in Hong
Kong.

It all began with a golden toilet.







Lam Sai Wing, chairman of Hang Fung Gold Technology, poses in a bath
inside his gold-made palaceIn 2001, Hong Kong jeweler Lam Sai-wing
built the world's most expensive bathroom - complete with a toilet and
bidet, a washing basin, toilet brushes and toilet paper holders, all
made from solid gold. He had dreamed of building the luxurious
amenities ever since growing up in a poor family in southern China's
Guangdong province. Lam says he was inspired by a collection of
Lenin's speeches, which he read during the Cultural Revolution.

Lam says that Lenin said after the victory of socialism, the best way
to use gold would be to build golden toilets.

Instead of waiting for the victory of socialism, Lam came to Hong Kong
in 1977 as an illegal immigrant to make his fortune. Starting out as
grocery shop assistant, he soon built up a successful gold and jewelry
retail business that today includes more than 100 shops in China and
Hong Kong.

The latest venture by the man with the Midas touch (someone who can
turn ordinary things into money or gold) is the construction of an
entire apartment made from gold, which includes the famous toilet.
Dubbed the Gold Palace, the more than 600-square-meter show room
includes a bed, a dining table, sofas, a desk and even a horse
carriage - all of gold. Two-and-a half tons of gold were used for the
construction of the room, which is worth about $60 million.

Some people may think the room, styled like a European palace, is too
flashy. But the display is popular with tourists.

This visitor from South Korea says she has traveled to many places but
has never seen anything as beautiful as this.

Ava Ho, assistant communications manager for Lam's Hang Fung group,
says some tourists even dress up for the visit.

"We find some would dress up like a princess - maybe they dream of a
palace like this," she explained.

Since it opened in September, the gold palace has become a fixture on
tourist itineraries. Up to 3,000 visitors come every day to snap
pictures of each other sitting on the golden bed, at the desk or in
the carriage. Only the use of the golden toilet is off-limits - there
is no golden door to give the visitors privacy.