The Cathedral of the Virgin of the Virgin of the Catholic Diocese of Hong Kong, located on Ken Road, Central, Hong Kong, was completed in 1888. The Cathedral can hold more than 1,000 people and now holds several masss every Sunday, as well as weddings for the church members. The church was repaired in 2002 and was awarded the 2003 UNESCO Asia Pacific Heritage Conservation Award. The Virgin Cathedral is a Goethe-style design, built of brick and stone, the cathedral is asymmetrical cross shape, the right is shorter than the left, the building is 82 meters long, 42 meters wide, high23.7 meters, supported by 38 granite pillars, and the central minarets are 10 meters high. The main altar is located in the middle, and the Catholic Diocese of Hong Kong is seated on the southwest side of the altar, which is also named for the church. The cathedral has four chapels, including the "Cathedral of the Sacred Heart", "Cathedral of Saint Antony", "Cathedral of Suffering" and "Cathedral of Saint Joseph". Three of them were former objects of the Church of Wellington Street. The cathedral has been rebuilt many times over the years, and the cathedral was added with stained glass windows in 1923. During World War II, a Japanese shell damaged a stone pillar behind the church on December 12, 1941. After the war, the church built a minaret and a large cross at the top of the church in the 1950s, while the church side facing the porch of the hard road was demolished in the 1970s. In 1954, when the Year of the Virgin was celebrated, Hong Kong Catholic students donated to buy a wooden statue of the Virgin without original sin, which is now placed on the central wall of the church; and another statue of the Virgin is placed in the "Mount of the Virgin" outside the east entrance. In 1985, stained glass windows were added. When the geometric patterned painted glass of the "Suffering Chapel" was renovated in 2002, it was replaced by a stained glass window designed by Zhang Qikai with the theme of 120 "Chinese Martyrs".