Windsor House was built on the site of former
Dairy Farm cold stores. Developer
Hongkong Land acquired the land when it acquired Dairy Farm in 1972, and originally planned to build a hotel on the site. The cold stores were demolished in July 1976 and the site was temporarily used as a public car park. The new Windsor House was designed by Hong Kong architecture firm
Palmer and Turner. In the 1990s, the building was said to comprise about of office space and of retail accommodation. A contract to construct the first phase of the building was signed on 14 April 1978 by Hongkong Land and
Gammon Construction, and work began on the following day, 15 April 1978. A
topping out ceremony was held on 3 July 1979. The initial anchor tenant was the
Inland Revenue Department, which leased about a third of the office space at Windsor House to centralise departments that had been scattered across a number of different office buildings. The building has two service cores – housing lifts, stairwells, toilets, and other uses – which flank the office floors. Part of the reason for including a second service core was that the Inland Revenue Department wanted its own entrance and lifts. The Inland Revenue Department later moved to the government-owned
Revenue Tower in order to save on rental costs. In September 1987,
Chinese Estates acquired two properties from Hongkong Land, Windsor House and
Harcourt House, for HK$2.38 billion. Windsor House was said to constitute $1.6 billion of this sum. When the building first opened, the retail podium housed a
Lane Crawford department store. In mid-1997, when their lease at Windsor House expired, Lane Crawford moved to nearby
Times Square, owned by parent company
Wharf, due to high rents as well as projected higher sales at the new location. The retail podium was extensively renovated from 2007 to 2010. In December 2015 it was announced that Chinese Estates would sell Windsor House to its largest shareholder, the tycoon and fugitive
Joseph Lau, for $12 billion. ==Shopping centre==