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Kowloon Walled City

Kowloon Walled City was an ungoverned and densely populated de jure Imperial Chinese enclave within the boundaries of Kowloon City, British Hong Kong. Originally a Chinese military fort, the walled city became an enclave after the New Territories were leased to the United Kingdom by China in 1898. Its population increased dramatically following the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong during World War II. By 1990, the walled city contained 50,000 residents[1] within its 2.6-hectare (6.4-acre) borders. From the 1950s to the 1970s, it was controlled by local triads and had high rates of prostitution, gambling, and drug abuse.[2]

Kowloon Walled City
九龍寨城
Walled city
An aerial view of Kowloon Walled City in 1989
Kowloon Walled City
Coordinates: 22°19′56″N 114°11′25″E / 22.33222°N 114.19028°E / 22.33222; 114.19028Coordinates: 22°19′56″N 114°11′25″E / 22.33222°N 114.19028°E / 22.33222; 114.19028
Country / CityChina (de facto, 1898–1912; de jure, 1898–1993)
British Hong Kong (de facto, 1912–1941 and 1945–1993)
Japan (de facto, 1941–1945)
DistrictKowloon City District
AreaKowloon City
Settledc. 1898
Demolished1993–1994
Government
 • TypeUngoverned
Area
 • Total2.6 ha (6.4 acres)
Population
 (1990)
 • Total50,000
 • Density1,930,000/km2 (5,000,000/sq mi)
Kowloon Walled City
Traditional Chinese九龍寨城
Simplified Chinese九龙寨城
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinJiǔlóng zhài chéng
Hakka
RomanizationGiu3liung2 cai4 shang2
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationGáulùhng sìhng jaaih
JyutpingGau2lung4 zaai6 seng4
Alternative Chinese name
Traditional Chinese九龍城寨
Simplified Chinese九龙城寨
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinJiǔlóng Chéng Zhài
Hakka
RomanizationGiu3liung2 shang2 cai4
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationGáulùhng sìhng jaaih
JyutpingGau2lung4 seng4 zaai6

In January 1987, the Hong Kong government announced plans to demolish the walled city. After an arduous eviction process, and the transfer of de jure sovereignty of the enclave from China to Britain, demolition began in March 1993 and was completed in April 1994. Kowloon Walled City Park opened in December 1995 and occupies the area of the former walled city. Some historical artefacts from the walled city, including its yamen building and remnants of its southern gate, have been preserved there.

History

Military outpost

 
Lung Tsun Stone Bridge and Lung Tsun Pavilion (Pavilion for Greeting Officials) of Kowloon Walled City in 1898

The history of the walled city can be traced back to the Song dynasty (960–1279), when an outpost was set up to manage the salt trade in the area. Little took place for hundreds of years afterward, although 30 guards were stationed there in 1668.[3] A small coastal fort was established around 1810 after Chinese forces abandoned Tung Lung Fort.[4] In 1842, during Qing Emperor Daoguang's reign, Hong Kong Island was ceded to Britain by the Treaty of Nanking. As a result, the Qing authorities felt it necessary to improve the fort to rule the area and check further British influence. The improvements, including the formidable defensive wall, were completed in 1847. The walled city was captured by rebels during the Taiping Rebellion in 1854, before being retaken a few weeks later.[3][5] The present walled city's "Dapeng Association House" forms the remnants of what was previously Lai Enjue's garrison.

 
1915 map of the Hong Kong region with the Kowloon Walled City listed as "Chinese Town" at the upper right-hand corner

The Convention for the Extension of Hong Kong Territory of 1898 handed additional parts of Hong Kong (the New Territories) to Britain for 99 years, but excluded the walled city, which at the time had a population of roughly 700. China was allowed to continue to keep officials there as long as they did not interfere with the defence of British Hong Kong. The following year, the governor, Sir Henry Blake, suspected that the viceroy of Canton was using troops to aid resistance to the new arrangements. On 14 April 1899, British forces attacked the walled city, only to find the viceroy's soldiers gone, leaving behind only the mandarin and 150 residents.[3] The Qing dynasty ended its rule in 1912, leaving the walled city to the British.

Though the British claimed ownership of the walled city, they did little with it over the following few decades. The Protestant church[which?] established an old people's home in the old "yamen" (Chinese administrative office) as well as a school and an almshouse in other former offices. Aside from such institutions, however, the walled city became a mere curiosity for British colonials and tourists to visit; it was labelled as "Chinese Town" in a 1915 map. In 1933, the Hong Kong authorities announced plans to demolish most of the decaying walled city's buildings, compensating the 436 squatters that lived there with new homes. That same year in 1933, the Nationalist Chinese government protested against the plan, and claimed jurisdiction over the city.[6][7] The Nationalist Chinese government continued to make claims on its jurisdiction throughout 1935, 1936, and the first half of 1937, until the war between China and Japan started.[8]

By 1940, only the yamen, the school, and one house remained. During the World War II occupation of Hong Kong, the Japanese occupying forces demolished the city's wall and used the stone to expand the nearby Kai Tak Airport.[3]

Urban settlement

 
An aerial view of Kowloon Walled City and the neighbouring Sai Tau Tsuen village in 1972

After Japan's surrender in 1945, China announced its intent to reclaim the walled city. In November 1946, Nationalist Chinese officials created the "Draft Outline Plan for Reinstatement of Administration" of the area, which included an office, schools, police, and other functions.[9] Refugees fleeing the Chinese Civil War post-1945 poured into Hong Kong, and 2,000 squatters occupied the walled city by 1947. After a failed attempt to drive them out in 1948, the British adopted a 'hands-off' policy in most matters concerning the walled city.[3] On 8 January 1948, the Nationalist Chinese government sent a memorandum to the British Ambassador, stating "The Ministry of Foreign Affairs now formally declare to the British Embassy that, in accordance with the provisions of the said Convention, the Chinese Government enjoys jurisdiction over the City of Kowloon and that they have no intention whatsoever of renouncing this jurisdiction."[8] The British Foreign Office, on 4 February 1948, considered a variety of solutions (including turning the site into a Nationalist Chinese Consulate-General), and ultimately recommended that the British "accept the principle of Chinese jurisdiction over Kowloon Walled City but the Chinese agree not to attempt to exercise that jurisdiction in practice."[8] Additionally, the British Foreign Office said that "A public garden controlled by the municipal authorities of Kowloon Leased territory offers such a solution and so would a Chinese consular compound, if the Chinese could first be induced to agree in principle to the appointment of a Consul General."[8]

Here, prostitutes installed themselves on one side of the street while a priest preached and handed out powdered milk to the poor on the other; social workers gave guidance while drug addicts squatted under the stairs getting high; what were children's games centres by day became strip-show venues by night. It was a very complex place, difficult to generalise about, a place that seemed frightening but where most people continued to lead normal lives. A place just like the rest of Hong Kong.

Leung Ping-kwan, City of Darkness, p. 120[10]

 
The south side of the Kowloon Walled City in 1975. The elevation of the buildings begins to reach its maximum height.

In January 1950, a fire broke out that destroyed over 2,500 huts, home to nearly 3,500 families and 17,000 total people.[11] The disaster highlighted the need for proper fire prevention in the largely wooden-built squatter areas, complicated by the lack of political ties with the colonial and Chinese governments.[12] The ruins gave new arrivals to the walled city the opportunity to build anew, causing speculation that the fire may have been intentionally set.[12][13]

With no government enforcement from the Chinese or the British aside from a few raids by the Royal Hong Kong Police, the walled city became a haven for crime and drugs. It was only during a 1959 trial for a murder that occurred within the walled city that the Hong Kong government was ruled to have jurisdiction there. By that time, however, the walled city was virtually ruled by the organised crime syndicates known as triads.[3]

Beginning in the 1950s, triad groups such as the 14K and Sun Yee On gained a stranglehold on the walled city's numerous brothels, gaming parlours, and opium dens. The walled city had become such a haven for criminals that police would venture into it only in large groups.[14] It was not until 1973 and 1974, when a series of more than 3,500 police raids resulted in over 2,500 arrests and over 1,800 kilograms (4,000 lb) of seized drugs, that the triads' power began to wane. With public support, particularly from younger residents, the continued raids gradually eroded drug use and violent crime. In 1983, the district police commander declared the walled city's crime rate to be under control.[3]

 
One of the outer edges in 1991

The city also underwent massive construction during the 1960s, with developers building new modular structures above older ones. The city became extremely densely populated and "a world unto its own," an enclave,[15] with over 33,000 people in 300 buildings occupying little more than 7 acres (2.8 ha). As a result, the city reached its maximum size by the late 1970s and early 1980s; a height restriction of 13 to 14 storeys had been imposed on the city due to the flight path of planes heading toward Kai Tak Airport.[16] As well as limiting building height, the proximity of the airport subjected residents to serious noise pollution. Eight municipal pipes provided water to the entire structure, although more could have come from wells.[17] A few of the streets were illuminated by fluorescent lights, as sunlight rarely reached the lower levels due to the outstanding disregard to air rights within the city.[3] Although the rampant crime of earlier decades diminished in later years, the walled city was still known for its high number of unlicensed doctors and dentists who could operate there without threat of prosecution.[18][19]

Although the walled city was for many years a hotbed of criminal activity, most residents were not involved in any crime and lived peacefully within its walls. Numerous small factories and businesses thrived inside the walled city, and some residents formed groups to organise and improve daily life there. [20]An attempt by the government in 1963 to demolish some shacks in a corner of the city gave rise to an "anti-demolition committee" that served as the basis for a kaifong association. Charities, religious societies, and other welfare groups were gradually introduced to the city. While medical clinics and schools went unregulated, the Hong Kong government provided some services such as water supply and mail delivery.[3]

Eviction and demolition

 
An alley in the city

The quality of life in the city—sanitary conditions in particular—remained far behind the rest of Hong Kong. The Sino-British Joint Declaration in 1984 laid the groundwork for the city's demolition.[3] The mutual decision by the two governments to tear down the walled city was announced on 14 January 1987.[21] On 10 March 1987, following the announcement that the walled city would be converted to a park, the Secretary for District Administration formally requested the Urban Council to take over the site following demolition. Owing to the presence of numerous other green spaces in the area, the Urban Services Department doubted the need for "yet another park" from a planning and operations point of view, but the council agreed nonetheless to accept the government's proposal on the condition that the government bear the cost of park construction.[22][23]

The government distributed some HK$2.7 billion (US$350 million) in compensation to the estimated 33,000 residents and businesses in a plan devised by a special committee of the Hong Kong Housing Authority.[24] Some residents were not satisfied with the compensation and were forcibly evicted between November 1991 and July 1992.[25][26] While it was deserted, the empty city was used to film a scene in the 1993 movie Crime Story.[27]

After four months of planning,[28] demolition of the walled city began on 23 March 1993[18] and concluded in April 1994. Construction work on Kowloon Walled City Park started the following month.[29]

Current status as park

 
Aerial view of the Kowloon Walled City Park

Design and construction

The area where the walled city once stood is now Kowloon Walled City Park, adjacent to Carpenter Road Park.[30] The 31,000 m2 (330,000 sq ft; 7.7 acres) park was completed in August 1995 and handed over to the Urban Council. It was opened officially by Governor Chris Patten a few months later on 22 December.[31] Construction of the park cost a total of HK$76 million.[29]

The park's design is modelled on Jiangnan gardens of the early Qing dynasty. It is divided into eight landscape features,[29] with the fully restored yamen as its centrepiece. The park's paths and pavilions are named after streets and buildings in the walled city.[32] Artefacts from the walled city, such as five inscribed stones and three old wells, are also on display in the park.[30] The park was designed by the Architectural Services Department, which won a "prestigious award" from the Central Society of Horticulture of Germany for the redevelopment.[33]

 
The remnants of the city's South Gate and its entrance plaques

Components of the park include:

  • The Eight Floral Walks, each named after a different plant or flower[34]
  • The Chess Garden, featuring four 3-by-5-metre (9.8 by 16.4 ft) Chinese chessboards[35]
  • The Garden of Chinese zodiac, containing stone statues of the 12 Chinese zodiac animals[36]
  • The Garden of Four Seasons (named Guangyin Square after the small open area in the walled city), a 300 m2 (3,200 sq ft) garden with plants that symbolise the four seasons[37]
  • The Six Arts Terrace, a 600 m2 (6,500 sq ft) wedding area containing a garden and the Bamboo Pavilion[30]
  • The Kuixing Pavilion, including a moon gate framed by two stone tablets and the towering Guibi Rock, which represents Hong Kong's return to China[38]
  • The Mountain View Pavilion, a two-storey structure resembling a docked boat that provides a good view of the entire park[30][39]
  • The Lung Tsun, Yuk Tong, and Lung Nam Pavilions[40]
  • The yamen and the remains of the South Gate (see below).

Declared monuments

 
The front of the restored yamen building with one of the original cannons
 
Children of early 20th century Kowloon Walled City residents playing on the yamen cannons.

The Antiquities and Monuments Office conducted archaeological examinations as the walled city was being demolished, and several cultural remains were discovered.[41] Among them were the walled city's yamen and remnants of its South Gate, which were officially designated declared monuments of Hong Kong on 4 October 1996.[42]

The South Gate had originally served as the walled city's main entrance. Along with its foundation, other remains included two stone plaques inscribed with "South Gate" and "Kowloon Walled City" from the South Gate and a flagstone path that had led up to it. The foundations of the city's wall and East Gate were also discovered.[29] The Hong Kong government preserved the South Gate remnants next to a square in front of the yamen.[43]

The yamen building is made up of three halls. Originally the middle hall served the Assistant Magistrate of Kowloon's administrative office, and the rear block was his residence. After the government officials left the area in 1899, it was used for several other purposes, including an old people's home, a refuge for widows and orphans, a school, and a clinic. It was restored in 1996 and is now found near the centre of the park.[44] It contains a photo gallery of the walled city, and two cannon dating back to 1802 sit at the sides of its entrance.[32]

The city before demolition

Layout and architecture

 
Model of Kowloon Walled City located at the entrance of Kowloon Walled City Park

The walled city was located in what became known as the Kowloon City area of Kowloon. In spite of its transformation from a fort into an urban enclave, the walled city retained the same basic layout. The original fort was built on a slope[45] and consisted of a 2.6-hectare (6.4-acre) plot measuring about 210 by 120 metres (690 by 390 ft). The stone wall surrounding it had four entrances and measured 4 metres (13 ft) tall and 4.6 metres (15 ft) thick before it was dismantled in 1943.[4][46]

 
The Kowloon Walled City in 1989

Construction surged dramatically during the 1960s and 1970s, until the formerly low-rise city consisted almost entirely of buildings with 10 storeys or more (with the notable exception of the yamen in its centre).[16][21] However, due to the Kai Tak Airport's position 800 metres (0.50 mi) south of the city, buildings did not exceed 14 storeys.[47] The two-storey Sai Tau Tsuen settlement bordered the walled city to the south and west until it was cleared in 1985 and replaced with Carpenter Road Park.[48][49]

The city's dozens of alleyways were often only 1–2 m (3.3–6.6 ft) wide, and had poor lighting and drainage.[50] An informal network of staircases and passageways also formed on upper levels, which was so extensive that one could travel north to south through the entire city without ever touching solid ground.[16] Construction in the city went unregulated, and most of the roughly 350 buildings were built with poor foundations and few or no utilities.[51] Because apartments were so small—a typical unit was 23 m2 (250 sq ft)—space was maximised with wider upper floors, caged balconies and rooftop additions.[20][21][52] Roofs in the city were full of television antennas, clothes lines, water tanks, and rubbish, and could be crossed using a series of ladders.[53][54]

Demography

 
A street at the edge of the city at night in 1993

Kowloon Walled City's early population fluctuated between zero and a few hundred, and began growing steadily shortly after World War II.[citation needed] However, there is no accurate population information available for much of the walled city's later existence.[citation needed] Official census numbers estimated the walled city's population at 10,004 in 1971 and 14,617 in 1981,[citation needed] but these figures were commonly considered[by whom?] to be much too low. Informal estimates, on the other hand, often mistakenly included the neighbouring squatter village of Sai Tau Tsuen.[50][55] Population figures of about 50,000 were also reported.[1]

A thorough government survey in 1987 gave a clearer picture: an estimated 33,000 people resided within the walled city. Based on this survey, the walled city had a population density of approximately 1,255,000 inhabitants per square kilometre (3,250,000/sq mi) in 1987,[21] making it the most densely populated spot in the world.[56]

Culture

 
Numerous dental clinics at an edge of the walled city in 1991
 
A playground at the edge of the city

In response to difficult living conditions, residents formed a tightly knit community, helping one another endure various hardships.[57] Within families, wives often did housekeeping, while grandmothers cared for their grandchildren and other children from surrounding households.[58] The city's rooftops were important gathering places, especially for residents who lived on upper floors. Parents used them to relax, and children would play or do homework there after school.[59]

The yamen in the heart of the city was also a major social centre, a place for residents to talk, have tea or watch television, and to take classes such as calligraphy. The Old People's Centre also held religious meetings for Christians and others.[60] Other religious institutions included the Fuk Tak and Tin Hau temples, which were used for a combination of Buddhist, Taoist, and animist practices.[61]

Cultural memory

The absence of an administration and the physical and psychological isolation from the greater Hong Kong area produced a unique culture of both crime and community that existed only within the city.[62] The widespread criminal activity in the city did not apply exclusively to triads alone; police would also conspire with the triads to profit from the illicit trades happening within the city.[63] Both police and residents spoke of the endemic corruption that was rife within the city.[64] However, during the 1970s greater police involvement helped to reduce the crime rate, and the city mostly became a haven for people hoping to avoid business regulations and taxes.[20] Thus, the city developed a form of "anarchic urbanism", in which the physical proximity led to a cultural interconnectedness and reliance between community residents, which has contributed to its modern appeal.[64]

While the city was shunned in its early existence, it has now become a point of pride for many Hong Kong residences alike.[48] The rising publicity around Hong Kong following the 1997 handover sparked a re-emergence in the public interest of Kowloon Walled City and its disappearance, and the cultural memory of the space has become more sanitised, with crime and corruption in the background.[65] In the modern era, the city has begun to be portrayed with a romantic dystopian identity, and many forms of modern media have borrowed the city's culture in their own works.[48] Kowloon Walled City has experienced a 'second life' in which many popular media and game outlets portray the city in a more nostalgic and romanticised version.[64]

In popular culture

Films

The Walled City of Kowloon has no visible wall around it, but it is as clearly defined as if there were one made of hard, high steel. It is instantly sensed by the congested open market that runs along the street in front of the row of dark run-down flats—shacks haphazardly perched on top of one another giving the impression that at any moment the entire blighted complex will collapse under its own weight, leaving nothing but rubble where elevated rubble had stood.

Robert Ludlum, The Bourne Supremacy, p. 149[66]

Many authors, filmmakers, game designers, and visual artists have used the walled city to convey a sense of oppressive urbanisation or unfettered criminality. In literature, Robert Ludlum's novel The Bourne Supremacy uses the walled city as one of its settings.[66] The City appears as a virtual reality environment (described by Steven Poole as an "oasis of political and creative freedom") in William Gibson's Bridge trilogy, and as a contrast with Singapore in his Wired article "Disneyland with the Death Penalty".[67][68] In the manga Crying Freeman, the titular character's wife travels to the walled city to master her swordsmanship and control a cursed sword.[69] The manga Blood+: Kowloon Nights uses the walled city as the setting for a series of murders.[70] The walled city finds an extensive mention in Doctor Robin Cook's 1991 novel Vital Signs. The filth, squalor and the crime-oriented nature of the area is described vividly when the characters Marissa and Tristan Williams pass by the back-lanes. The later part of episode 3 and episode 4 of the anime Street Fighter II V are set in the Kowloon Walled City, depicted as a dark and lawless area where Ryu, Ken and Chun-Li have to fight for their lives at every turn, being rescued by the police once they reach the walled city's limits.

The 1982 Shaw Brothers film Brothers from the Walled City is set in Kowloon Walled City.[71] The 1984 gangster film Long Arm of the Law features the walled city as a refuge for gang members before they are gunned down by police.[72] In the 1988 film Bloodsport, starring Jean-Claude Van Damme, the walled city is the setting for a martial arts tournament.[73] The 1992 non-narrative film Baraka features several highly detailed shots of the walled city shortly before its demolition. The 1993 film Crime Story starring Jackie Chan was partly filmed in the deserted walled city, and includes real scenes of building explosions.[27] A walled neighbourhood called the Narrows in the 2005 film Batman Begins was inspired by the walled city.[74] The 2006 Hong Kong horror film Re-cycle features a decrepit, nightmarish version of the walled city, complete with tortured souls from which the protagonist must flee.[75] The 2016 TVB martial arts drama A Fist Within Four Walls takes place in the triad-ridden walled city in the early 1960s.[76]

Hive of dream. Those mismatched, uncalculated windows. How they seemed to absorb all the frantic activity of Kai Tak airport, sucking in energy like a black hole.

William Gibson, "Disneyland with the Death Penalty"[68]

 
Warehouse Kawasaki, a former Japanese game arcade with a Kowloon Walled City theme

Memoirs and autobiographies

A few of the people who spent time in Kowloon Walled City have written accounts of their experiences. Evangelist Jackie Pullinger wrote a 1989 memoir, Crack in the Wall, about her involvement in treating drug addicts within the walled city.[77] In his 2004 autobiography Gweilo, Martin Booth describes his exploration of the walled city as a child in the 1950s.[72] Gordon Jones, a District Officer of Kowloon City District at the time also published his recollections of the city during his time in office.[78]

Video games

Kowloon Walled City is depicted in several games, including Kowloon's Gate[72] and Shenmue II.[79] The game Stranglehold, a sequel to the film Hard Boiled, features a version of the walled city filled with hundreds of Triad members.[79] In the games Fear Effect and Fear Effect 2, photographs of the walled city were used as inspiration "for moods, camera angles and lighting."[80] Concept art for the MMORPG Guild Wars Factions depicts massive, densely packed structures inspired by the walled city.[81] The pen-and-paper RPG Shadowrun and CRPG Shadowrun: Hong Kong include a crime-ridden, rebuilt version of the Walled City set in 2056.[82] The walled city also features in the 2010 game Call of Duty: Black Ops.[83] The 2022 video game Stray's environment is influenced by the walled city as well.[84]

Amusement arcade

A partial recreation of the Kowloon Walled City existed in the Warehouse Kawasaki, an amusement arcade that operated from 2009 to 2019 in the Japanese suburb of Kawasaki, Kanagawa. The atmosphere of the walled city was reflected in the arcade's narrow corridors, electrical wires, pipes, postboxes, sign boards, neon lights, frayed posters, and various other small touches.[85]

See also

References

Citations

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Sources

  • Lambot, Ian (September 2007). City of Darkness: Life in Kowloon Walled City. Watermark. ISBN 978-1-873200-13-1.
  • Smart, Alan (1 June 2006). The Shek Kip Mei Myth: Squatters, Fires and Colonial Rule in Hong Kong, 1950–1963. Hong Kong University Press. ISBN 978-962-209-792-6.

Further reading

Books and research papers

  • Girad, Greg; Lambort, Ian; Goddard, Charles (1993). City of Darkness – Life in Kowloon Walled City. Watermark. ISBN 978-1873200896. OCLC 767526480. OL 8653461M.
  • City of Darkness: Revisited, by Ian Lambot (writer, photographer) and Greg Girard (photographer), published by Watermark, 2014, ISBN 9781873200889 (revised edition of City of Darkness)
  • Kyūryūjō Tanbō Makutsu de Kurasu Hitobito: City of Darkness (九龍城探訪 魔窟で暮らす人々 City of Darkness, "Kowloon Walled City Exploration: People Who Live in the Devil's Den (City of Darkness)"), by Ian Lambot (writer, photographer) and Greg Girard (photographer), published by EastPress, 2004, ISBN 9784872574234 (Japanese edition of City of Darkness)
  • Daizukai Kyūryūjō (大図解九龍城, "Grand Kowloon Walled City Schematics"), by the Kyūryūjō Tankentai (the "Kowloon Walled City Exploration Team"), including Hitomi Terasawa (illustrator), Takayuki Suzuki (architect) and Hiroaki Kani (supervisor), published by Iwanami Shoten, 1997, ISBN 9784000080705
  • Kyūryūjōsai (九龍城砦, "Kowloon Walled City"), by Ryūji Miyamoto (photographer), Hiroshi Aramata (text contributor) and Ken'ichi Ōhashi (text contributor), published by Heibonsha, 1997, ISBN 9784582277364; Heibonsha, 1998, ISBN 9784582277364; Heibonsha, 1999, ISBN 9784582277364
  • Saigo no Kyūryūjōsai (最期の九龍城砦, "The End of Kowloon Walled City"), by Shintarō Nakamura, published by Shinpusha, 1996, ISBN 9784883066469
  • An Architectural Study on the Kowloon Walled City: Preliminary Findings, by Suenn Ho, published by Columbia University, 1992[ISBN missing]
  • Jiulong Cheng Zhai shihua (九龍城寨史話; 'Kowloon Walled City's History'), by Lu Jinzhe, published by Joint Publishing, 1997, ISBN 9789620406829
  • 九龍城寨:一個特殊社區的地理透視; 'Kowloon Walled City: A Geographical Perspective of a Special Community', by Wong Kwan-yiu et al., published by the Chinese University of Hong Kong – Department of Geography, 1992
  • FARMAX: Excursions on Density, by Winy Maas, Jacob van Rijs and Richard Koek (main contributors), published by 010 Publishers, 1998, ISBN 9789064502668; 010 Publishers, 2006, ISBN 9789064505874

Documentary films

External links

External media
Images
    Media related to Kowloon Walled City at Wikimedia Commons
    Media related to Kowloon Walled City Park at Wikimedia Commons
  "City of Anarchy", Infographic of Kowloon Walled City (SCMP News)
Video
  Video clip of the City (in Japanese)
Unofficial analyses:
  • Kowloon Walled City life (South China Morning Post article)
  • Kowloon Walled City project, Wall Street Journal
  • Rare Maps Show Life in Hong Kong's Vice-Filled 'Walled City'
  • “Dark tower of dreams: Inside the Walled City of Kowloon”, CBC Ideas. CBC Radio One. 18 October 2017. (Retrieved 12 July 2018.)
  • "The Strange Saga of Kowloon Walled City" Atlas Obscura. 06 January 2020 (Retrieved 24 September 2022.)

kowloon, walled, city, ungoverned, densely, populated, jure, imperial, chinese, enclave, within, boundaries, kowloon, city, british, hong, kong, originally, chinese, military, fort, walled, city, became, enclave, after, territories, were, leased, united, kingd. Kowloon Walled City was an ungoverned and densely populated de jure Imperial Chinese enclave within the boundaries of Kowloon City British Hong Kong Originally a Chinese military fort the walled city became an enclave after the New Territories were leased to the United Kingdom by China in 1898 Its population increased dramatically following the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong during World War II By 1990 the walled city contained 50 000 residents 1 within its 2 6 hectare 6 4 acre borders From the 1950s to the 1970s it was controlled by local triads and had high rates of prostitution gambling and drug abuse 2 Kowloon Walled City 九龍寨城Walled cityAn aerial view of Kowloon Walled City in 1989Kowloon Walled CityCoordinates 22 19 56 N 114 11 25 E 22 33222 N 114 19028 E 22 33222 114 19028 Coordinates 22 19 56 N 114 11 25 E 22 33222 N 114 19028 E 22 33222 114 19028Country CityChina de facto 1898 1912 de jure 1898 1993 British Hong Kong de facto 1912 1941 and 1945 1993 Japan de facto 1941 1945 DistrictKowloon City DistrictAreaKowloon CitySettledc 1898Demolished1993 1994Government TypeUngovernedArea Total2 6 ha 6 4 acres Population 1990 Total50 000 Density1 930 000 km2 5 000 000 sq mi Kowloon Walled CityTraditional Chinese九龍寨城Simplified Chinese九龙寨城TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinJiǔlong zhai chengHakkaRomanizationGiu3liung2 cai4 shang2Yue CantoneseYale RomanizationGauluhng sihng jaaihJyutpingGau2lung4 zaai6 seng4Alternative Chinese nameTraditional Chinese九龍城寨Simplified Chinese九龙城寨TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinJiǔlong Cheng ZhaiHakkaRomanizationGiu3liung2 shang2 cai4Yue CantoneseYale RomanizationGauluhng sihng jaaihJyutpingGau2lung4 seng4 zaai6In January 1987 the Hong Kong government announced plans to demolish the walled city After an arduous eviction process and the transfer of de jure sovereignty of the enclave from China to Britain demolition began in March 1993 and was completed in April 1994 Kowloon Walled City Park opened in December 1995 and occupies the area of the former walled city Some historical artefacts from the walled city including its yamen building and remnants of its southern gate have been preserved there Contents 1 History 1 1 Military outpost 1 2 Urban settlement 1 3 Eviction and demolition 2 Current status as park 2 1 Design and construction 2 2 Declared monuments 3 The city before demolition 3 1 Layout and architecture 3 2 Demography 3 3 Culture 3 4 Cultural memory 4 In popular culture 4 1 Films 4 2 Memoirs and autobiographies 4 3 Video games 4 4 Amusement arcade 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Sources 7 Further reading 7 1 Books and research papers 7 2 Documentary films 8 External linksHistory EditMilitary outpost Edit Lung Tsun Stone Bridge and Lung Tsun Pavilion Pavilion for Greeting Officials of Kowloon Walled City in 1898 The history of the walled city can be traced back to the Song dynasty 960 1279 when an outpost was set up to manage the salt trade in the area Little took place for hundreds of years afterward although 30 guards were stationed there in 1668 3 A small coastal fort was established around 1810 after Chinese forces abandoned Tung Lung Fort 4 In 1842 during Qing Emperor Daoguang s reign Hong Kong Island was ceded to Britain by the Treaty of Nanking As a result the Qing authorities felt it necessary to improve the fort to rule the area and check further British influence The improvements including the formidable defensive wall were completed in 1847 The walled city was captured by rebels during the Taiping Rebellion in 1854 before being retaken a few weeks later 3 5 The present walled city s Dapeng Association House forms the remnants of what was previously Lai Enjue s garrison 1915 map of the Hong Kong region with the Kowloon Walled City listed as Chinese Town at the upper right hand corner The Convention for the Extension of Hong Kong Territory of 1898 handed additional parts of Hong Kong the New Territories to Britain for 99 years but excluded the walled city which at the time had a population of roughly 700 China was allowed to continue to keep officials there as long as they did not interfere with the defence of British Hong Kong The following year the governor Sir Henry Blake suspected that the viceroy of Canton was using troops to aid resistance to the new arrangements On 14 April 1899 British forces attacked the walled city only to find the viceroy s soldiers gone leaving behind only the mandarin and 150 residents 3 The Qing dynasty ended its rule in 1912 leaving the walled city to the British Though the British claimed ownership of the walled city they did little with it over the following few decades The Protestant church which established an old people s home in the old yamen Chinese administrative office as well as a school and an almshouse in other former offices Aside from such institutions however the walled city became a mere curiosity for British colonials and tourists to visit it was labelled as Chinese Town in a 1915 map In 1933 the Hong Kong authorities announced plans to demolish most of the decaying walled city s buildings compensating the 436 squatters that lived there with new homes That same year in 1933 the Nationalist Chinese government protested against the plan and claimed jurisdiction over the city 6 7 The Nationalist Chinese government continued to make claims on its jurisdiction throughout 1935 1936 and the first half of 1937 until the war between China and Japan started 8 By 1940 only the yamen the school and one house remained During the World War II occupation of Hong Kong the Japanese occupying forces demolished the city s wall and used the stone to expand the nearby Kai Tak Airport 3 Urban settlement Edit An aerial view of Kowloon Walled City and the neighbouring Sai Tau Tsuen village in 1972 After Japan s surrender in 1945 China announced its intent to reclaim the walled city In November 1946 Nationalist Chinese officials created the Draft Outline Plan for Reinstatement of Administration of the area which included an office schools police and other functions 9 Refugees fleeing the Chinese Civil War post 1945 poured into Hong Kong and 2 000 squatters occupied the walled city by 1947 After a failed attempt to drive them out in 1948 the British adopted a hands off policy in most matters concerning the walled city 3 On 8 January 1948 the Nationalist Chinese government sent a memorandum to the British Ambassador stating The Ministry of Foreign Affairs now formally declare to the British Embassy that in accordance with the provisions of the said Convention the Chinese Government enjoys jurisdiction over the City of Kowloon and that they have no intention whatsoever of renouncing this jurisdiction 8 The British Foreign Office on 4 February 1948 considered a variety of solutions including turning the site into a Nationalist Chinese Consulate General and ultimately recommended that the British accept the principle of Chinese jurisdiction over Kowloon Walled City but the Chinese agree not to attempt to exercise that jurisdiction in practice 8 Additionally the British Foreign Office said that A public garden controlled by the municipal authorities of Kowloon Leased territory offers such a solution and so would a Chinese consular compound if the Chinese could first be induced to agree in principle to the appointment of a Consul General 8 Here prostitutes installed themselves on one side of the street while a priest preached and handed out powdered milk to the poor on the other social workers gave guidance while drug addicts squatted under the stairs getting high what were children s games centres by day became strip show venues by night It was a very complex place difficult to generalise about a place that seemed frightening but where most people continued to lead normal lives A place just like the rest of Hong Kong Leung Ping kwan City of Darkness p 120 10 The south side of the Kowloon Walled City in 1975 The elevation of the buildings begins to reach its maximum height In January 1950 a fire broke out that destroyed over 2 500 huts home to nearly 3 500 families and 17 000 total people 11 The disaster highlighted the need for proper fire prevention in the largely wooden built squatter areas complicated by the lack of political ties with the colonial and Chinese governments 12 The ruins gave new arrivals to the walled city the opportunity to build anew causing speculation that the fire may have been intentionally set 12 13 With no government enforcement from the Chinese or the British aside from a few raids by the Royal Hong Kong Police the walled city became a haven for crime and drugs It was only during a 1959 trial for a murder that occurred within the walled city that the Hong Kong government was ruled to have jurisdiction there By that time however the walled city was virtually ruled by the organised crime syndicates known as triads 3 Beginning in the 1950s triad groups such as the 14K and Sun Yee On gained a stranglehold on the walled city s numerous brothels gaming parlours and opium dens The walled city had become such a haven for criminals that police would venture into it only in large groups 14 It was not until 1973 and 1974 when a series of more than 3 500 police raids resulted in over 2 500 arrests and over 1 800 kilograms 4 000 lb of seized drugs that the triads power began to wane With public support particularly from younger residents the continued raids gradually eroded drug use and violent crime In 1983 the district police commander declared the walled city s crime rate to be under control 3 One of the outer edges in 1991 The city also underwent massive construction during the 1960s with developers building new modular structures above older ones The city became extremely densely populated and a world unto its own an enclave 15 with over 33 000 people in 300 buildings occupying little more than 7 acres 2 8 ha As a result the city reached its maximum size by the late 1970s and early 1980s a height restriction of 13 to 14 storeys had been imposed on the city due to the flight path of planes heading toward Kai Tak Airport 16 As well as limiting building height the proximity of the airport subjected residents to serious noise pollution Eight municipal pipes provided water to the entire structure although more could have come from wells 17 A few of the streets were illuminated by fluorescent lights as sunlight rarely reached the lower levels due to the outstanding disregard to air rights within the city 3 Although the rampant crime of earlier decades diminished in later years the walled city was still known for its high number of unlicensed doctors and dentists who could operate there without threat of prosecution 18 19 Although the walled city was for many years a hotbed of criminal activity most residents were not involved in any crime and lived peacefully within its walls Numerous small factories and businesses thrived inside the walled city and some residents formed groups to organise and improve daily life there 20 An attempt by the government in 1963 to demolish some shacks in a corner of the city gave rise to an anti demolition committee that served as the basis for a kaifong association Charities religious societies and other welfare groups were gradually introduced to the city While medical clinics and schools went unregulated the Hong Kong government provided some services such as water supply and mail delivery 3 Eviction and demolition Edit An alley in the city The quality of life in the city sanitary conditions in particular remained far behind the rest of Hong Kong The Sino British Joint Declaration in 1984 laid the groundwork for the city s demolition 3 The mutual decision by the two governments to tear down the walled city was announced on 14 January 1987 21 On 10 March 1987 following the announcement that the walled city would be converted to a park the Secretary for District Administration formally requested the Urban Council to take over the site following demolition Owing to the presence of numerous other green spaces in the area the Urban Services Department doubted the need for yet another park from a planning and operations point of view but the council agreed nonetheless to accept the government s proposal on the condition that the government bear the cost of park construction 22 23 The government distributed some HK 2 7 billion US 350 million in compensation to the estimated 33 000 residents and businesses in a plan devised by a special committee of the Hong Kong Housing Authority 24 Some residents were not satisfied with the compensation and were forcibly evicted between November 1991 and July 1992 25 26 While it was deserted the empty city was used to film a scene in the 1993 movie Crime Story 27 After four months of planning 28 demolition of the walled city began on 23 March 1993 18 and concluded in April 1994 Construction work on Kowloon Walled City Park started the following month 29 Current status as park EditFor details on the park itself see Kowloon Walled City Park Aerial view of the Kowloon Walled City Park Design and construction Edit The area where the walled city once stood is now Kowloon Walled City Park adjacent to Carpenter Road Park 30 The 31 000 m2 330 000 sq ft 7 7 acres park was completed in August 1995 and handed over to the Urban Council It was opened officially by Governor Chris Patten a few months later on 22 December 31 Construction of the park cost a total of HK 76 million 29 The park s design is modelled on Jiangnan gardens of the early Qing dynasty It is divided into eight landscape features 29 with the fully restored yamen as its centrepiece The park s paths and pavilions are named after streets and buildings in the walled city 32 Artefacts from the walled city such as five inscribed stones and three old wells are also on display in the park 30 The park was designed by the Architectural Services Department which won a prestigious award from the Central Society of Horticulture of Germany for the redevelopment 33 The remnants of the city s South Gate and its entrance plaques Components of the park include The Eight Floral Walks each named after a different plant or flower 34 The Chess Garden featuring four 3 by 5 metre 9 8 by 16 4 ft Chinese chessboards 35 The Garden of Chinese zodiac containing stone statues of the 12 Chinese zodiac animals 36 The Garden of Four Seasons named Guangyin Square after the small open area in the walled city a 300 m2 3 200 sq ft garden with plants that symbolise the four seasons 37 The Six Arts Terrace a 600 m2 6 500 sq ft wedding area containing a garden and the Bamboo Pavilion 30 The Kuixing Pavilion including a moon gate framed by two stone tablets and the towering Guibi Rock which represents Hong Kong s return to China 38 The Mountain View Pavilion a two storey structure resembling a docked boat that provides a good view of the entire park 30 39 The Lung Tsun Yuk Tong and Lung Nam Pavilions 40 The yamen and the remains of the South Gate see below Declared monuments Edit The front of the restored yamen building with one of the original cannons Children of early 20th century Kowloon Walled City residents playing on the yamen cannons The Antiquities and Monuments Office conducted archaeological examinations as the walled city was being demolished and several cultural remains were discovered 41 Among them were the walled city s yamen and remnants of its South Gate which were officially designated declared monuments of Hong Kong on 4 October 1996 42 The South Gate had originally served as the walled city s main entrance Along with its foundation other remains included two stone plaques inscribed with South Gate and Kowloon Walled City from the South Gate and a flagstone path that had led up to it The foundations of the city s wall and East Gate were also discovered 29 The Hong Kong government preserved the South Gate remnants next to a square in front of the yamen 43 The yamen building is made up of three halls Originally the middle hall served the Assistant Magistrate of Kowloon s administrative office and the rear block was his residence After the government officials left the area in 1899 it was used for several other purposes including an old people s home a refuge for widows and orphans a school and a clinic It was restored in 1996 and is now found near the centre of the park 44 It contains a photo gallery of the walled city and two cannon dating back to 1802 sit at the sides of its entrance 32 The city before demolition EditLayout and architecture Edit Model of Kowloon Walled City located at the entrance of Kowloon Walled City Park The walled city was located in what became known as the Kowloon City area of Kowloon In spite of its transformation from a fort into an urban enclave the walled city retained the same basic layout The original fort was built on a slope 45 and consisted of a 2 6 hectare 6 4 acre plot measuring about 210 by 120 metres 690 by 390 ft The stone wall surrounding it had four entrances and measured 4 metres 13 ft tall and 4 6 metres 15 ft thick before it was dismantled in 1943 4 46 The Kowloon Walled City in 1989 Construction surged dramatically during the 1960s and 1970s until the formerly low rise city consisted almost entirely of buildings with 10 storeys or more with the notable exception of the yamen in its centre 16 21 However due to the Kai Tak Airport s position 800 metres 0 50 mi south of the city buildings did not exceed 14 storeys 47 The two storey Sai Tau Tsuen settlement bordered the walled city to the south and west until it was cleared in 1985 and replaced with Carpenter Road Park 48 49 The city s dozens of alleyways were often only 1 2 m 3 3 6 6 ft wide and had poor lighting and drainage 50 An informal network of staircases and passageways also formed on upper levels which was so extensive that one could travel north to south through the entire city without ever touching solid ground 16 Construction in the city went unregulated and most of the roughly 350 buildings were built with poor foundations and few or no utilities 51 Because apartments were so small a typical unit was 23 m2 250 sq ft space was maximised with wider upper floors caged balconies and rooftop additions 20 21 52 Roofs in the city were full of television antennas clothes lines water tanks and rubbish and could be crossed using a series of ladders 53 54 Demography Edit A street at the edge of the city at night in 1993 Kowloon Walled City s early population fluctuated between zero and a few hundred and began growing steadily shortly after World War II citation needed However there is no accurate population information available for much of the walled city s later existence citation needed Official census numbers estimated the walled city s population at 10 004 in 1971 and 14 617 in 1981 citation needed but these figures were commonly considered by whom to be much too low Informal estimates on the other hand often mistakenly included the neighbouring squatter village of Sai Tau Tsuen 50 55 Population figures of about 50 000 were also reported 1 A thorough government survey in 1987 gave a clearer picture an estimated 33 000 people resided within the walled city Based on this survey the walled city had a population density of approximately 1 255 000 inhabitants per square kilometre 3 250 000 sq mi in 1987 21 making it the most densely populated spot in the world 56 Culture Edit Numerous dental clinics at an edge of the walled city in 1991 A playground at the edge of the city In response to difficult living conditions residents formed a tightly knit community helping one another endure various hardships 57 Within families wives often did housekeeping while grandmothers cared for their grandchildren and other children from surrounding households 58 The city s rooftops were important gathering places especially for residents who lived on upper floors Parents used them to relax and children would play or do homework there after school 59 The yamen in the heart of the city was also a major social centre a place for residents to talk have tea or watch television and to take classes such as calligraphy The Old People s Centre also held religious meetings for Christians and others 60 Other religious institutions included the Fuk Tak and Tin Hau temples which were used for a combination of Buddhist Taoist and animist practices 61 Cultural memory Edit This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is grammar and tone Please help improve this article if you can November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The absence of an administration and the physical and psychological isolation from the greater Hong Kong area produced a unique culture of both crime and community that existed only within the city 62 The widespread criminal activity in the city did not apply exclusively to triads alone police would also conspire with the triads to profit from the illicit trades happening within the city 63 Both police and residents spoke of the endemic corruption that was rife within the city 64 However during the 1970s greater police involvement helped to reduce the crime rate and the city mostly became a haven for people hoping to avoid business regulations and taxes 20 Thus the city developed a form of anarchic urbanism in which the physical proximity led to a cultural interconnectedness and reliance between community residents which has contributed to its modern appeal 64 While the city was shunned in its early existence it has now become a point of pride for many Hong Kong residences alike 48 The rising publicity around Hong Kong following the 1997 handover sparked a re emergence in the public interest of Kowloon Walled City and its disappearance and the cultural memory of the space has become more sanitised with crime and corruption in the background 65 In the modern era the city has begun to be portrayed with a romantic dystopian identity and many forms of modern media have borrowed the city s culture in their own works 48 Kowloon Walled City has experienced a second life in which many popular media and game outlets portray the city in a more nostalgic and romanticised version 64 In popular culture EditFilms Edit The Walled City of Kowloon has no visible wall around it but it is as clearly defined as if there were one made of hard high steel It is instantly sensed by the congested open market that runs along the street in front of the row of dark run down flats shacks haphazardly perched on top of one another giving the impression that at any moment the entire blighted complex will collapse under its own weight leaving nothing but rubble where elevated rubble had stood Robert Ludlum The Bourne Supremacy p 149 66 Many authors filmmakers game designers and visual artists have used the walled city to convey a sense of oppressive urbanisation or unfettered criminality In literature Robert Ludlum s novel The Bourne Supremacy uses the walled city as one of its settings 66 The City appears as a virtual reality environment described by Steven Poole as an oasis of political and creative freedom in William Gibson s Bridge trilogy and as a contrast with Singapore in his Wired article Disneyland with the Death Penalty 67 68 In the manga Crying Freeman the titular character s wife travels to the walled city to master her swordsmanship and control a cursed sword 69 The manga Blood Kowloon Nights uses the walled city as the setting for a series of murders 70 The walled city finds an extensive mention in Doctor Robin Cook s 1991 novel Vital Signs The filth squalor and the crime oriented nature of the area is described vividly when the characters Marissa and Tristan Williams pass by the back lanes The later part of episode 3 and episode 4 of the anime Street Fighter II V are set in the Kowloon Walled City depicted as a dark and lawless area where Ryu Ken and Chun Li have to fight for their lives at every turn being rescued by the police once they reach the walled city s limits The 1982 Shaw Brothers film Brothers from the Walled City is set in Kowloon Walled City 71 The 1984 gangster film Long Arm of the Law features the walled city as a refuge for gang members before they are gunned down by police 72 In the 1988 film Bloodsport starring Jean Claude Van Damme the walled city is the setting for a martial arts tournament 73 The 1992 non narrative film Baraka features several highly detailed shots of the walled city shortly before its demolition The 1993 film Crime Story starring Jackie Chan was partly filmed in the deserted walled city and includes real scenes of building explosions 27 A walled neighbourhood called the Narrows in the 2005 film Batman Begins was inspired by the walled city 74 The 2006 Hong Kong horror film Re cycle features a decrepit nightmarish version of the walled city complete with tortured souls from which the protagonist must flee 75 The 2016 TVB martial arts drama A Fist Within Four Walls takes place in the triad ridden walled city in the early 1960s 76 Hive of dream Those mismatched uncalculated windows How they seemed to absorb all the frantic activity of Kai Tak airport sucking in energy like a black hole William Gibson Disneyland with the Death Penalty 68 Warehouse Kawasaki a former Japanese game arcade with a Kowloon Walled City theme Memoirs and autobiographies Edit A few of the people who spent time in Kowloon Walled City have written accounts of their experiences Evangelist Jackie Pullinger wrote a 1989 memoir Crack in the Wall about her involvement in treating drug addicts within the walled city 77 In his 2004 autobiography Gweilo Martin Booth describes his exploration of the walled city as a child in the 1950s 72 Gordon Jones a District Officer of Kowloon City District at the time also published his recollections of the city during his time in office 78 Video games Edit Kowloon Walled City is depicted in several games including Kowloon s Gate 72 and Shenmue II 79 The game Stranglehold a sequel to the film Hard Boiled features a version of the walled city filled with hundreds of Triad members 79 In the games Fear Effect and Fear Effect 2 photographs of the walled city were used as inspiration for moods camera angles and lighting 80 Concept art for the MMORPG Guild Wars Factions depicts massive densely packed structures inspired by the walled city 81 The pen and paper RPG Shadowrun and CRPG Shadowrun Hong Kong include a crime ridden rebuilt version of the Walled City set in 2056 82 The walled city also features in the 2010 game Call of Duty Black Ops 83 The 2022 video game Stray s environment is influenced by the walled city as well 84 Amusement arcade Edit A partial recreation of the Kowloon Walled City existed in the Warehouse Kawasaki an amusement arcade that operated from 2009 to 2019 in the Japanese suburb of Kawasaki Kanagawa The atmosphere of the walled city was reflected in the arcade s narrow corridors electrical wires pipes postboxes sign boards neon lights frayed posters and various other small touches 85 See also Edit China portal Hong Kong portal Architecture portalHistory of Hong Kong Lung Tsun Stone Bridge Nan Lian Garden Tung Wah Group of Hospitals Museum List of buildings and structures in Hong Kong List of urban public parks and gardens in Hong Kong Terra nullius Bir Tawil Halaib Triangle Saudi Iraqi neutral zone 1922 1991 Kamagasaki in Osaka Japan Vele di Scampia in Naples Italy Centro Financiero Confinanzas an abandoned skyscraper populated in a similar manner Ras Khamis a neighbourhood in East Jerusalem that also has unplanned highrise construction due to uncertain political jurisdiction Dharavi a densely populated community within Mumbai which has developed a similar localised economy and unplanned infrastructure system Treasure Hill formerly an illegal settlement in Taipei founded by Chinese Nationalist military veterans at the end of the 1940s References EditCitations Edit a b Nosowitz Dan 18 April 2013 Life Inside The Most Densely Populated Place on Earth Infographic Popular Science Popular Science Retrieved 13 April 2018 1990 50 000 inhabitants Infographic Life Inside The Kowloon Walled City ArchDaily 18 April 2013 Retrieved 11 February 2022 a b c d e f g h i j Wilkinson Julia 1993 A Chinese Magistrate s Fort City of Darkness Life in Kowloon Walled City pp 60 71 ISBN 978 1 8732 0013 1 a b Sinn Elizabeth Kowloon Walled City Its Origin and Early History PDF Journal of the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 27 30 31 Archived from the original PDF on 30 April 2011 Retrieved 25 November 2009 Li Long Lam Excavation Report of Kowloon Walled City Hong Kong Archived 27 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine 香港九龙寨城发掘简报 in Kaogu vol 6 2007 Miners N J 1982 A Tale of Two Walled Cities Kowloon and Weihaiwei Hong Kong Law Journal 12 179 The National Archives Historic Hong Kong documents Gwulo Old Hong Kong gwulo com Retrieved 11 October 2021 a b c d Britain and China 1945 1950 Documents on British Policy Overseas Series I Volume 8 S R Ashton G Bennett K Hamilton Routledge 2013 p 127 ISBN missing The History of Planning for Kowloon City PDF Planning Perspectives Kwan Leung Ping The Walled City Our Place City of Darkness Life in Kowloon Walled City pp 120 23 Smart 2006 p 59 a b Smart 2006 pp 65 67 Booth Martin 14 November 2006 Golden Boy Memories of a Hong Kong Childhood St Martin s Press p 131 ISBN 978 1 4668 1858 3 Carney John 16 March 2013 Kowloon Walled City Life in the City of Darkness South China Morning Post Retrieved 29 January 2014 Harter Seth November 2000 Hong Kong s Dirty Little Secret Journal of Urban History 27 1 92 113 doi 10 1177 009614420002700106 ISSN 0096 1442 S2CID 145574313 a b c Lambot 2007 p 48 Goddard Charles September 2007 The Water Supply City of Darkness Life in Kowloon Walled City pp 36 38 a b Vines Stephen 24 March 1993 Demolition begins on HK s Walled City The Business Times Singapore p 4 Retrieved 25 November 2009 subscription required Wall Street Journal 2 April 2014 City of Imagination Kowloon Walled City 20 Years Later archived from the original on 17 November 2021 retrieved 8 March 2019 a b c Basler Barbara 16 June 1992 The Walled City Home to Huddled Masses Falls The New York Times p A4 Retrieved 27 November 2009 a b c d Goddard Charles The Clearance City of Darkness Life in Kowloon Walled City pp 208 11 Memorandum for Members of the Recreation Select Committee Capital Works Select Committee Finance Select Committee and the Standing Committee of the Whole Council Proposed Park at the site of Kowloon Walled City 10 April 1987 Urban Council Memorandum for Members of the Recreation Select Committee Proposed Park Development at The Kowloon Walled City Site 7 September 1990 Urban Council Lau Esme 10 December 1987 2 7 billion package for residents of Walled City PDF The Hong Kong Standard subscription required Families evicted from slum city The Toronto Star 28 November 1991 p A3 Retrieved 25 November 2009 subscription required Jonathan Braude 3 July 1992 Last squatters evicted in Kowloon The Times Retrieved 25 November 2009 subscription required a b Strother Barbara Kowloon Walled City Park Information Home amp Abroad Archived from the original on 22 July 2011 Retrieved 27 October 2009 Kang Chung Ng 19 March 1993 Work to start on slum area The South China Morning Post China p 4 Retrieved 25 November 2009 subscription required a b c d Kowloon Walled City Park History Background Leisure and Cultural Services Department 21 October 2004 Archived from the original on 7 February 2010 Retrieved 6 November 2009 a b c d Location Database Film Services Office 1 June 2009 Retrieved 18 November 2009 dead link Flint John 23 December 1995 Walled City s transformation sparks hopes for other sites South China Morning Post Retrieved 28 January 2014 a b The Yamen Leisure and Cultural Services Department 21 October 2004 Archived from the original on 23 November 2009 Retrieved 17 November 2009 Ng Kang Chung 12 January 1994 Walled City park project wins top award South China Morning Post Eight Floral Walks Leisure and Cultural Services Department 21 October 2004 Archived from the original on 13 November 2009 Retrieved 16 November 2009 The Chess Garden Leisure and Cultural Services Department 21 October 2004 Archived from the original on 1 November 2009 Retrieved 16 November 2009 The Garden of Chinese Zodiac Leisure and Cultural Services Department 21 October 2004 Archived from the original on 13 November 2009 Retrieved 16 November 2009 The Garden of Four Seasons Leisure and Cultural Services Department 21 October 2004 Archived from the original on 13 November 2009 Retrieved 16 November 2009 Kuixing Pavilion and Guibi Rock Leisure and Cultural Services Department 21 October 2004 Archived from the original on 13 November 2009 Retrieved 16 November 2009 The Mountain View Pavilion Leisure and Cultural Services Department 21 October 2004 Archived from the original on 25 November 2009 Retrieved 16 November 2009 Layout Plan Leisure and Cultural Services Department 21 October 2004 Archived from the original on 23 November 2009 Retrieved 19 November 2009 The Geographical Information System on Hong Kong Heritage Leisure and Cultural Services Department Archived from the original on 12 November 2014 Retrieved 19 November 2009 Annex I Listing of Declared Monuments Environmental Protection Department 28 April 2006 Archived from the original on 28 December 2009 Retrieved 6 November 2009 The Old South Gate Leisure and Cultural Services Department 21 October 2004 Archived from the original on 24 November 2009 Retrieved 19 November 2009 Former Yamen Building of Kowloon Walled City Kowloon Walled City Park Leisure and Cultural Services Department 5 February 2009 Archived from the original on 3 November 2009 Retrieved 22 October 2009 Lambot 2007 p 18 Benedetti Paul 18 September 1982 A nervy tour of Kowloon s Walled City The Globe and Mail Retrieved 27 November 2009 subscription required Lambot 2007 p 206 a b c Girard Greg Foreword City of Darkness Life in Kowloon Walled City p 7 Lambot 2007 p 71 a b Wesley Smith Peter 1998 Unequal treaty 1898 1997 China Great Britain and Hong Kong s new territories rev ed Hong Kong Oxford University Press pp 189 90 ISBN 0 19 590354 4 Lambot 2007 pp 48 74 79 Lambot 2007 pp 34 199 Popham Peter Introduction City of Darkness Life in Kowloon Walled City pp 9 13 Lambot 2007 pp 199 203 Siu Fong Betty Ho 1986 Redevelopment of Kowloon Walled City A Feasibility Study PDF University of Hong Kong p 52 OCLC 52017240 Archived from the original PDF on 10 March 2014 Retrieved 11 March 2014 Chan Wilfred 2 January 2015 Kowloon Walled City In Hong Kong it was the densest place on Earth CNN Retrieved 13 May 2021 Lambot 2007 p 122 Lambot 2007 pp 115 154 Lambot 2007 pp 203 204 Lambot 2007 p 132 Lambot 2007 pp 26 139 Lee Jung Joon 2016 Kowloon Walled City Revisited Photography and Postcoloniality in the City of Darkness Trans Asia Photography 6 2 1 doi 10 1215 215820251 6 2 202 S2CID 192928727 Ho Lawrence 2012 Un Forgetting walls by lines on maps A case study on property rights cadastral mapping and the landscape of the Kowloon Walled City Land Use Policy 57 94 102 doi 10 1016 j landusepol 2016 05 022 hdl 10722 227423 via JSTOR a b c Fraser Alistair 2017 The second life of Kowloon Walled City Crime Media and cultural memory Crime Media Culture 12 2 217 234 doi 10 1177 1741659017703681 PMC 5732597 PMID 29278247 Ackbar Abbas 1997 Hong Kong Culture and the Politics of Disappearance University of Minnesota Press pp 1 15 ISBN 978 0 8166 8798 5 a b Ludlum Robert March 1987 The Bourne Supremacy Bantam Books ISBN 0 553 26322 6 Poole Steven 3 May 2009 Tomorrow s man The Guardian London Retrieved 15 October 2009 a b Gibson William September October 1993 Disneyland with the Death Penalty Wired Vol 1 no 4 Conde Nast Archived from the original on 11 January 2021 Retrieved 16 November 2009 Bartholow Michael 4 October 2006 Crying Freeman Volume 3 TPB Advanced Media Network Retrieved 26 October 2009 Blood Kowloon Nights Dark Horse Comics Retrieved 26 October 2009 Review of Brothers from the Walled City Sogoodreviews com Retrieved 11 March 2014 a b c McDonogh Gary Wong Cindy 30 August 2005 Global Hong Kong Routledge pp 27 28 ISBN 978 0 415 94770 1 New Age Timeout BD New Age 19 May 2005 Archived from the original on 20 June 2008 Retrieved 21 October 2009 Otto Jeff 6 June 2005 Interview Christopher Nolan IGN Archived from the original on 31 March 2012 Retrieved 15 October 2009 Shingleton Matt 12 September 2006 Re Cycle The DVD Times Retrieved 17 October 2009 TVB 周刊 950 新劇解構 TVB Weekly 950 New drama explained TVB Weekly in Chinese TVB 7 September 2015 Pullinger Jackie Danziger Nick 1 May 1989 Crack in the Wall Hodder amp Stoughton Religious ISBN 978 0 340 49067 9 Jones Gordon 2011 The Kowloon City District and the Clearance of the Kowloon Walled City Personal Recollections PDF Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong Branch 51 257 278 ISSN 1991 7295 JSTOR 23891943 a b McMillan Fraser 7 September 2009 Stranglehold Thunderbolt Archived from the original on 22 July 2012 Retrieved 24 October 2009 Lui Chi Kong 4 April 2001 Interview with Stan Liu Part 1 Game Critics Retrieved 24 October 2009 ArenaNet Art Director Daniel Dociu wins Spectrum 14 gold medal Guild Wars 9 March 2007 Retrieved 24 October 2009 Boyle Rob 17 July 2006 Shadowrun Runner Havens Fanpro pp 13 26 ISBN 978 1 932564 68 6 Archived from the original on 23 January 2009 Retrieved 17 October 2009 Young Michelle 10 February 2011 The Lost Kowloon Walled City in Hong Kong as Represented in Video Games Untapped Cities Retrieved 18 August 2019 Stray is a futuristic cat simulator for PS4 and PS5 Engadget Retrieved 30 July 2021 Ryall Julian 1 October 2013 Arcade brings Kowloon Walled City back from the dead in Japan South China Morning Post Retrieved 27 April 2014 Sources Edit Lambot Ian September 2007 City of Darkness Life in Kowloon Walled City Watermark ISBN 978 1 873200 13 1 Smart Alan 1 June 2006 The Shek Kip Mei Myth Squatters Fires and Colonial Rule in Hong Kong 1950 1963 Hong Kong University Press ISBN 978 962 209 792 6 Further reading EditBooks and research papers Edit Girad Greg Lambort Ian Goddard Charles 1993 City of Darkness Life in Kowloon Walled City Watermark ISBN 978 1873200896 OCLC 767526480 OL 8653461M City of Darkness Revisited by Ian Lambot writer photographer and Greg Girard photographer published by Watermark 2014 ISBN 9781873200889 revised edition of City of Darkness Kyuryujō Tanbō Makutsu de Kurasu Hitobito City of Darkness 九龍城探訪 魔窟で暮らす人々 City of Darkness Kowloon Walled City Exploration People Who Live in the Devil s Den City of Darkness by Ian Lambot writer photographer and Greg Girard photographer published by EastPress 2004 ISBN 9784872574234 Japanese edition of City of Darkness Daizukai Kyuryujō 大図解九龍城 Grand Kowloon Walled City Schematics by the Kyuryujō Tankentai the Kowloon Walled City Exploration Team including Hitomi Terasawa illustrator Takayuki Suzuki architect and Hiroaki Kani supervisor published by Iwanami Shoten 1997 ISBN 9784000080705 Kyuryujōsai 九龍城砦 Kowloon Walled City by Ryuji Miyamoto photographer Hiroshi Aramata text contributor and Ken ichi Ōhashi text contributor published by Heibonsha 1997 ISBN 9784582277364 Heibonsha 1998 ISBN 9784582277364 Heibonsha 1999 ISBN 9784582277364 Saigo no Kyuryujōsai 最期の九龍城砦 The End of Kowloon Walled City by Shintarō Nakamura published by Shinpusha 1996 ISBN 9784883066469 An Architectural Study on the Kowloon Walled City Preliminary Findings by Suenn Ho published by Columbia University 1992 ISBN missing Jiulong Cheng Zhai shihua 九龍城寨史話 Kowloon Walled City s History by Lu Jinzhe published by Joint Publishing 1997 ISBN 9789620406829 九龍城寨 一個特殊社區的地理透視 Kowloon Walled City A Geographical Perspective of a Special Community by Wong Kwan yiu et al published by the Chinese University of Hong Kong Department of Geography 1992 FARMAX Excursions on Density by Winy Maas Jacob van Rijs and Richard Koek main contributors published by 010 Publishers 1998 ISBN 9789064502668 010 Publishers 2006 ISBN 9789064505874 Documentary films Edit The Walled City 城寨 as part of Hong Kong Connection s 鏗鏘集 70th segment produced by Radio Television Hong Kong RTHK 1979 Hongkongs geheime Stadt Ein Labyrinth fur 50 000 Menschen Hong Kong s Secret City A Labyrinth for 50 000 People produced by Hugo Portisch of the public Austrian Broadcasting Corporation ORF 1989 Kowloon Walled City as part of Whicker s World produced by ITV Yorkshire 1980 City of Imagination Kowloon Walled City 20 Years Later archive footage by ORF and Suenn Ho produced by The Wall Street Journal 2014External links EditExternal mediaImages Media related to Kowloon Walled City at Wikimedia Commons Media related to Kowloon Walled City Park at Wikimedia Commons City of Anarchy Infographic of Kowloon Walled City SCMP News Video Video clip of the City in Japanese Official website for Kowloon Walled City Park Leisure and Cultural Services Department LCSD Unofficial analyses A team s exploration of the City before demolition Historical architectural and political overview Kowloon Walled City life South China Morning Post article Kowloon Walled City project Wall Street Journal Rare Maps Show Life in Hong Kong s Vice Filled Walled City Dark tower of dreams Inside the Walled City of Kowloon CBC Ideas CBC Radio One 18 October 2017 Retrieved 12 July 2018 The Strange Saga of Kowloon Walled City Atlas Obscura 06 January 2020 Retrieved 24 September 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kowloon Walled City amp oldid 1129072139, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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