Being for a long time fascinated by the idea of the crowded, lawless and ungoverned exclave within an enclave called Kowloon Walled City (see previously), we were astonished to be referred this recorded walk-through captured in the space of an afternoon (no daylight reaching the lowest storeys) by University of Hong Kong architecture student Suenn Ho, having no idea that such footage and interviews existed, taken in 1991, a couple years prior to its demolition, evicting the some thirty-five thousand who lived and worked within the confines of less than three hectares—translating to an incredible population density of over one and a quarter million residents per square kilometre. The former footprint now a park and its reputation sanitised, Hong Kongers, formerly condemned Kowloon as a dangerous slum when mass-urbanisation started in the 1960s, are now romanticising this dystopian neighbourhood and we are happy this documentary has been preserved for posterity. The Japanese film crew mentioned early on also produced a short piece, available here.
synchronoptica
one year ago: exploring the Vesser valley (with synchronoptica)
seven years ago: photographer Zofia Rydet plus potentially eliminating the deadliest disease vector
eight years ago: a poem for Manchester, Trump to visit the Pope, micro-mastery, diplomatic indiscretions plus America’s designs on its southern neighbours during the US civil war
nine years ago: Kraftwerk animated plus that proposal for an elevated bus
twelve years ago: a day-by-day account of World War I