A novel model, devised to describe spontaneous chirality synchronization in complex liquids and liquid crystals, is proposed and studied. Segments of ribbon-like molecular columns with left- or right-handed 180degree twist lie on the bonds of a honeycomb lattice so that three ribbons meet in a vertex of the hexagonal honeycomb. The energy of each vertex is a minimum if the three ribbons have the same chirality, -E, and is +E otherwise, and the ground state is homochiral, i.e. all ribbons have the same hand. The energy levels for two vertices linked by a single ribbon are either -2E, 0 and +2 E in this vertex model. Monte Carlo simulations demonstrate that this model is identical to an Ising spin model on a Kagome lattice, for which the site energy structure is quite different. The equivalence of the ordering of the vertex and Ising spin models is also shown analytically. The energy difference between the disordered and ground states, 4J in the spin model, is related to the transition temperature for the Kagome lattice using the exact result, Tc=2.14J. The ordering energy difference for a single site is 50% higher for the vertex model. The thermodynamic energy for the vertex model is corrected by a factor of 1/3 due to double counting and this makes the specific heat of the vertex model also equal to that of the spin model as expected. Other similar models where there is an unusual relation between the site and thermodynamic energies are discussed briefly.