Logo

radarq.net

  • Random
  • Archive
  • RSS
Notes from chazhuttonsfsm:
Kowloon Walled City
Was for a while, one of the most densely populated places on earth - during the 80’s it was estimated that around 33,000 people were living in the 200m x 200m block.
The entire thing was demolished in 1992 and replaced with a park, however, since 1945 it had been growing with mostly unregulated building and at such a density that sunlight never reached a lot of the lower levels.
The whole thing started as a military outpost, and when the British decided to have Hong Kong island during the Treaty of Nanking, the Quing authorities decided to build a wall around the outpost in order to minimise any further British influence in the area. Nobody really told that to the British though, and instead they decided to rent everything except the Walled City for 100 years.
For a while it became a bit of a curiosity, for colonialists and tourists untill 1933 when they decided to knock most of it down. The Wall survived untill 1940 when the occupying Japanese forces tore it down to extend the airport next door.
Once the Japanese left there was a bit of an ownership vacuum and the Chinese announced their intention to reclaim the city, with that news some 2000 refugees flooded into the city which the British then tried to remove, until they decided that it was all a bit too hard and they probably had better things to do.
At that point, things got interesting - with neither the British or Chinese governments willing to intervene, the locals described it as ‘unregulated for three’ and it became a haven for drugs dealing, prostitution, unlicensed dentistry and opium dens. Triad groups ruled the city during the 50’s and 60’s, and Police would only venture into the city in large groups. Eventually, after something like 3500 raids during the early 70’s, the police regained control and by the early 80’s the crime rate was apparently under control.
During that time however, the city had grown considerably. Here’s the Fort in 1898, Then here’s the city in 1973 where individual buildings are still identifiable, and the here it is a few years before demolition, seemingly at saturation point.
The network of stairs walkways were apparently so extensive that it was possible to traverse the entire city from north to south without actually touching ground level. Sunlight rarely touched the ground level and as one former resident recalls “At other times right at noon, daylight would leak in, and people would read the paper by the light and kids would play in it. It was rather fascinating.”. Meanwhile, at roof level, the antenna strewn rooftops served as regular meating spot for residence, where children could play and fly kites. 
Eventually, both the Chinese and British agreed that the city had to go  (it’s also possible that it was their disagreement that had allowed the  city to get to the point that it did) and in 1992 it was entirely  demolished and replaced with a park.
To give you an idea of what life was like inside, I recommend watching this clip from this brilliant and informative documentary featuring Jean Claude Van Damme.
Pop-upView Separately

Notes from chazhuttonsfsm:

Kowloon Walled City

Was for a while, one of the most densely populated places on earth - during the 80’s it was estimated that around 33,000 people were living in the 200m x 200m block.

The entire thing was demolished in 1992 and replaced with a park, however, since 1945 it had been growing with mostly unregulated building and at such a density that sunlight never reached a lot of the lower levels.

The whole thing started as a military outpost, and when the British decided to have Hong Kong island during the Treaty of Nanking, the Quing authorities decided to build a wall around the outpost in order to minimise any further British influence in the area. Nobody really told that to the British though, and instead they decided to rent everything except the Walled City for 100 years.

For a while it became a bit of a curiosity, for colonialists and tourists untill 1933 when they decided to knock most of it down. The Wall survived untill 1940 when the occupying Japanese forces tore it down to extend the airport next door.

Once the Japanese left there was a bit of an ownership vacuum and the Chinese announced their intention to reclaim the city, with that news some 2000 refugees flooded into the city which the British then tried to remove, until they decided that it was all a bit too hard and they probably had better things to do.

At that point, things got interesting - with neither the British or Chinese governments willing to intervene, the locals described it as ‘unregulated for three’ and it became a haven for drugs dealing, prostitution, unlicensed dentistry and opium dens. Triad groups ruled the city during the 50’s and 60’s, and Police would only venture into the city in large groups. Eventually, after something like 3500 raids during the early 70’s, the police regained control and by the early 80’s the crime rate was apparently under control.

During that time however, the city had grown considerably. Here’s the Fort in 1898, Then here’s the city in 1973 where individual buildings are still identifiable, and the here it is a few years before demolition, seemingly at saturation point.

The network of stairs walkways were apparently so extensive that it was possible to traverse the entire city from north to south without actually touching ground level. Sunlight rarely touched the ground level and as one former resident recalls “At other times right at noon, daylight would leak in, and people would read the paper by the light and kids would play in it. It was rather fascinating.”. Meanwhile, at roof level, the antenna strewn rooftops served as regular meating spot for residence, where children could play and fly kites. 

Eventually, both the Chinese and British agreed that the city had to go (it’s also possible that it was their disagreement that had allowed the city to get to the point that it did) and in 1992 it was entirely demolished and replaced with a park.

To give you an idea of what life was like inside, I recommend watching this clip from this brilliant and informative documentary featuring Jean Claude Van Damme.

Source: chazhuttonsfsm

    • #Hong Kong
    • #Kowloon
    • #density
    • #city
  • 1 year ago > chazhuttonsfsm
  • 114
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet

114 Notes/ Hide

  1. moderncathedral reblogged this from chazhuttonsfsm
  2. econimish liked this
  3. elizabeth-catherine liked this
  4. panopticongonewrong liked this
  5. immovable liked this
  6. enterthenight liked this
  7. bearmod liked this
  8. bearmod reblogged this from debbieso
  9. debbieso reblogged this from f-whimsy
  10. f-whimsy reblogged this from eviscerateyoungcaptain
  11. bigwchs liked this
  12. nofunclub reblogged this from eviscerateyoungcaptain
  13. thegraveyardorbit liked this
  14. antsintheafterbirth liked this
  15. eviscerateyoungcaptain reblogged this from plagiarismisnecessary
  16. hautepop liked this
  17. la-main-gauche liked this
  18. hndmnk liked this
  19. 7knotwind liked this
  20. scine liked this
  21. nostalgiya liked this
  22. baltimorehorses liked this
  23. giannibugnosagace reblogged this from acarro
  24. deathcabsandcockneyreapers liked this
  25. refugado liked this
  26. acarro reblogged this from blackv
  27. mightythylacine liked this
  28. otakugangsta liked this
  29. blackv reblogged this from plagiarismisnecessary
  30. blackv liked this
  31. gioielli liked this
  32. speakarchifocus liked this
  33. idekiko reblogged this from takecom
  34. littleamnesiac reblogged this from chazhuttonsfsm
  35. alwaysthetumbling reblogged this from chazhuttonsfsm
  36. kikuzu reblogged this from chazhuttonsfsm
  37. llacigart liked this
  38. livinha reblogged this from chazhuttonsfsm
  39. tutmondigo reblogged this from chazhuttonsfsm
  40. icelolly liked this
  41. yuichibass liked this
  42. yuichibass reblogged this from d-d-d
  43. akamedia reblogged this from chazhuttonsfsm
  44. akizeta liked this
  45. takecom reblogged this from d-d-d
  46. nilab reblogged this from d-d-d
  47. hoover900 liked this
  48. d-d-d reblogged this from hresvelgr
  49. hresvelgr reblogged this from chazhuttonsfsm
  50. inmydreamwithshiver liked this
  51. Show more notesLoading...

Recent comments

Blog comments powered by Disqus
← Previous • Next →

radarq.net, un estudio abierto que trabaja e investiga sobre arquitectura, red y ciudad.

radarq.net, an open studio which works and researches in architecture, networks and city

On going:

  • Cityscape and New Media
  • Deu anys sense vergonyes
  • About
  • Team
  • Tags
  • Legal
  • @radarqnet on Twitter
  • Facebook Profile
  • radarqnet on Flickr
  • radarqnet on Delicious
  • Google
  • My Skype Info

@radarqnet

loading tweets…

  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Mobile

 

Licencia de Creative Commons  Contenidos propios. Otros contenidos, por favor sigue la fuente.
  Own content. Other content, please follow the source.

. Effector Theme by Carlo Franco.

Powered by Tumblr