Hong Kong s wistful longing for its cityscape to remain unchanged
Hong Kong’s wistful longing for its cityscape to remain unchanged
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alt="mfletter07 - Bamboo master Chan Yuk Kwong setting up bamboo scaffolding in Hong Kong. Photo courtesy of Chan Yuk Kwong."/>Bamboo master Chan Yuk Kwong setting up bamboo scaffolding in Hong Kong. Will we see the last of this, after a recent government edict over safety concerns?
ST PHOTO: FILE
alt=avatar-alt/>Li Xueying
ST PodcastsSynopsis: Every first Friday of the month, The Straits Times catches up with its foreign correspondents about life and trends in the countries they’re based in.
Hong Kong’s bamboo scaffolding is immortalised in many a Jackie Chan flick, with heroes and baddies fighting it out while teetering on poles. But the city has been gripped in what Hong Kong correspondent Magdalene Fung says is an almost “visceral fear” over a recent government edict to reduce the use of bamboo in construction projects due to safety concerns.
ST foreign editor Li Xueying catches up with her over a similar debate arising over the would-be demolition of Choi Hung, Hong Kong’s first large-scale public housing project completed in the 1960s.
Having undergone the social turmoil and political changes of recent years since the 2019 protests, Hong Kongers are seeking comfort in the things that can remain the same - and quietly protesting the changes coming their way.
Highlights (click/tap above):
0:53 Changes in government regulations over bamboo scaffolding
2:25 Safety concerns
9:24 A fear of change
11:42 Why Hong Kong’s oldest public housing estate has to go
17:02 Has cultural nostalgia been weaponised?
Read Magdalene Fung’s article here: https://str.sg/dbo9
Read Li Xueying’s articles: https://str.sg/iqmR
Follow Li Xueying on LinkedIn: https://str.sg/ip4x
Register for Asian Insider newsletter: https://str.sg/stnewsletters
Host: Li Xueying (
xueying@sph.com.sg
)Produced and edited by: Fa’izah
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