05 December 2025 18:30 - 20:30 Leighton Room, Craigengower Cricket Club, Happy Valley
05 December 2025 | 18:30 - 20:30 | Leighton Room, Craigengower Cricket Club, Happy Valley
Join the Hong Kong Regional Group for this in-person evening event.
To promote digital innovation within Hong Kong engineering geology community, GSL HKRG Focus Group 2 is organising a Digital Burst as a platform to communicate, exchange ideas, and initiate digital momentum. Three experienced industry
speakers will deliver a short, precise 10-minute burst talk demonstrating how digital methods are reshaping our work. Topics include Applied GIS and System Development, Python applications, and automated real-time site monitoring. A
moderated panel discussion and networking time will follow to deepen dialogue, encourage interaction, and synthesize key takeaways
The event is free of charge and all are welcome. Registration is required by 28 November 2025 and are offered on a first come first serve basis with priority given to Fellows of GSL. There are 30 spaces for this event. Please click on the Book Now button to register.
For further details, please refer to the flyer below. For enquiries, please contact Taurus Yong or Jesse Tam .
Caleb SANG
Caleb is an Engineering Geologist in Hong Kong with GIS and geotechnical experience across APAC, graduated from University of Tasmania, Australia and the University of Portsmouth, UK. He joined Arup in 2024, working on infrastructure, natural terrain hazards, ground investigation, and digital projects, with commercial awareness and data-driven practice.
Claire LAM
Claire is a geophysicist graduated from Imperial College London in 2014. She led marine geophysics surveys for major Hong Kong projects such as Tung Chung New Town, HKIA Third Runway, and LNG terminal. Now in business development at Sixense, advancing monitoring and survey technologies while remaining hands-on in fieldwork and data reporting across the New Territories.
Regine TSUI
Regine is a Chartered Geologist at Aurecon, with BSc and MPhil in Geology at the University of Hong Kong. She has eight years’ experience in natural terrain hazard studies, ground modelling, and tunnel design. She is also known as a Python practitioner who applies digital methods to deliver robust geological interpretations and practical engineering solutions.
The event is free of charge and all are welcome. Registration is required by 28 November 2025 and are offered on a first come first serve basis with priority given to Fellows of GSL. There are 30 spaces for this event. Please click on the Book Now button to register.