Neighbourhood and building forms : a study of the Hong Kong public housing blocks

Hong Kong is currently undergoing a programme of massive public housing construction to improve the housing conditions of low income people. The first series of public housing blocks, called the Mark resettlement blocks, were built in 1954. Since then, the Hong Kong government has been developing...

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Main Author: Law, Eric Chi Wang
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/7891
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-78912014-03-14T15:42:14Z Neighbourhood and building forms : a study of the Hong Kong public housing blocks Law, Eric Chi Wang Hong Kong is currently undergoing a programme of massive public housing construction to improve the housing conditions of low income people. The first series of public housing blocks, called the Mark resettlement blocks, were built in 1954. Since then, the Hong Kong government has been developing different public housing forms. These include the Trident blocks in the 1970s and the Harmony blocks in the 1990s. However, these housing blocks were primarily designed to minimise the construction cost and to maximise the construction speed. There was little consideration for the social aspect of public housing. By comparing the neighbourhoods of the Mark resettlement blocks, Trident blocks and Harmony blocks, this thesis investigates the impact of physical planning on neighbourhood formation in public housing in Hong Kong. The thesis also exainines the factors that affected the different neighbourhoods. This thesis finds that the key factors affecting neighbourhood formation are communal opportunities, compatibility of social background, familiarity of living environment, social pride and social involvement. To encourage neighbourhood formation in Hong Kong, this thesis recommends the following housing planning principles. First, different building types need to be integrated in the same housing estate to meet the needs of different users and to provide greater choice. Second, encourage the formation of local neighbourhood niches by grouping residents with similar interests and social conditions. Third, more close-to-home communal spaces are needed in the public housing estates. These spaces can be integrated with commercial and community facilities at both ground level and upper level neighbourhood "sky" gathering places. 2009-05-05T18:41:37Z 2009-05-05T18:41:37Z 1998 2009-05-05T18:41:37Z 1998-05 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/7891 eng UBC Retrospective Theses Digitization Project [http://www.library.ubc.ca/archives/retro_theses/]
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Hong Kong is currently undergoing a programme of massive public housing construction to improve the housing conditions of low income people. The first series of public housing blocks, called the Mark resettlement blocks, were built in 1954. Since then, the Hong Kong government has been developing different public housing forms. These include the Trident blocks in the 1970s and the Harmony blocks in the 1990s. However, these housing blocks were primarily designed to minimise the construction cost and to maximise the construction speed. There was little consideration for the social aspect of public housing. By comparing the neighbourhoods of the Mark resettlement blocks, Trident blocks and Harmony blocks, this thesis investigates the impact of physical planning on neighbourhood formation in public housing in Hong Kong. The thesis also exainines the factors that affected the different neighbourhoods. This thesis finds that the key factors affecting neighbourhood formation are communal opportunities, compatibility of social background, familiarity of living environment, social pride and social involvement. To encourage neighbourhood formation in Hong Kong, this thesis recommends the following housing planning principles. First, different building types need to be integrated in the same housing estate to meet the needs of different users and to provide greater choice. Second, encourage the formation of local neighbourhood niches by grouping residents with similar interests and social conditions. Third, more close-to-home communal spaces are needed in the public housing estates. These spaces can be integrated with commercial and community facilities at both ground level and upper level neighbourhood "sky" gathering places.
author Law, Eric Chi Wang
spellingShingle Law, Eric Chi Wang
Neighbourhood and building forms : a study of the Hong Kong public housing blocks
author_facet Law, Eric Chi Wang
author_sort Law, Eric Chi Wang
title Neighbourhood and building forms : a study of the Hong Kong public housing blocks
title_short Neighbourhood and building forms : a study of the Hong Kong public housing blocks
title_full Neighbourhood and building forms : a study of the Hong Kong public housing blocks
title_fullStr Neighbourhood and building forms : a study of the Hong Kong public housing blocks
title_full_unstemmed Neighbourhood and building forms : a study of the Hong Kong public housing blocks
title_sort neighbourhood and building forms : a study of the hong kong public housing blocks
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/7891
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