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"Memories of Home - 50 Years of Public Housing in Hong Kong"
Thematic Galleries (1) & (2), The tragic fire that broke out in the Shek Kip Mei squatter area on Christmas Day in 1953 inspired a wave of development that saw the birth of Hong Kong's public housing programme. Resettlement buildings six, seven or eight storeys high sprung up to provide temporary relief, and, as the programme expanded to provide more and more homes for Hong Kong's citizens, the construction of public housing in the late 1970s even gave an impetus to the spread of the population to the territory's new towns. Today, over three million people live in public rental housing and assisted home ownership flats, with over half the population benefiting from the public housing programme. |
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2005© | Important notices |
Last revision date: 2005/09/01 |