China’s new development narrative places science and education at the centre of long-term competitiveness. This is a systemic project powered by technology, grounded in education and driven by talent as the country’s foremost resource.
Hong Kong’s traditional identity as an international financial centre is no longer sufficient to sustain the city’s competitiveness. To remain relevant, Hong Kong must articulate a platform that structurally aligns with China’s national strategy while retaining its own institutional distinctiveness.
The Northern Metropolis is essentially a “science and education city” – a fusion of a technology park and a university town. It integrates the San Tin Technopole, the university town and the Hetao Shenzhen-Hong Kong Science and Technology Innovation Cooperation Zone. For the first time, Hong Kong possesses a platform that can be clearly positioned within China’s science and education strategy.
The focus is not on building campuses or factories. It is about creating an institutional loop that integrates technology, education and research. San Tin carries the science dimension, with innovative industries, prototyping facilities and advanced manufacturing that will help fill Hong Kong’s long-standing gap in research commercialisation.
The university town carries the education dimension, expanding post-secondary capacity, strengthening talent pipelines and embedding collaboration between academic, research and industry. Hetao covers both research and regulation, enabling cross-boundary research collaboration, data flows, intellectual property protection and regulatory innovation. Together, these three components have a structural resonance that makes the Northern Metropolis a concrete embodiment of China’s strategy.
Hong Kong is not alone in seeking an identity founded in science and education. Beijing, Shenzhen and Shanghai have already shown how integrated ecosystems can reshape a city’s long-term competitiveness.
