The bridge was built to link Kowloon with ongoing industrial and
new town development in
Tsuen Wan and
Kwai Chung, providing an alternative to the older, congested
Castle Peak Road. Construction began in 1966. Built at a cost of about HK$13.5 million, the new bridge, then Hong Kong's longest, was officially opened on 29 October 1968 by acting governor
Michael David Irving Gass. Kwai Chung Road was built along the coastline to the west of the bridge at the same time in order to complete the new link to Kwai Chung. In 1975, the
Hong Kong Government announced plans to reclaim Lai Chi Kok Bay, providing a park on the new land to help resolve the scarcity of public recreational space in the area. It said the bay, popular with swimmers, was badly polluted and constituted a health hazard. The bay was subsequently filled in, meaning the bridge no longer spans any water and simply resembles an
elevated road. The bridge required
underpinning to contend with additional loading imposed by the new fill. In the 1990s, the
Urban Council developed the new land directly under the bridge as the Lai Chi Kok Park Stage II. From 1999 to 2003, an extension of
Mei Foo station was constructed as part of the
West Rail project, adding new railway platforms and a new ticketing concourse. These new structures were built directly below the Lai Chi Kok Bridge, causing the bridge to shift slightly. ==Design and construction==