To a visitor who comes to Hong Kong from the West, the most conspicuous feature of urban life in Hong Kong is congestion. In most working-class and most business districts, it is all-pervading, apparently limitless, and impenetrable. Western planning philosophy often stresses the ill-effects of high-density development on human behaviour. To some extent, this anti-high-density hypothesis has been adopted by some planners in the Asian Region, even in Hong Kong. In the 1974 Plan for Hong Kong, prepared by Abercrombie, the "New York solution' was categorically denounced. Hong Kong was preoccupied by this fear of high density up to the early 1960s. Much new development in the metropolitan area has been uncoordinated and shortages of land have p...
This dissertation explores the urbanism of Hong Kong between 1967 and 1997, tracing the history of H...
Population wise, Hong Kong has too many people on too small a physical entity—1,075 square kilometer...
Urban studies scholarship on Hong Kong fairly explains the urban transformations and transitions dur...
The increased concentration of urban populations is a global phenomenon. Hong Kong, like many Asian ...
This subject has been chosen because the housing density in South East Asia is incredibly high, part...
Because of its grave implication within the economic and social development of a community, inadequa...
This paper offers an approach to understanding high-density living in precarious housing. Developing...
Rapid population growth and critical land shortage were often considered as the two fundamental forc...
In recent years, the government of Hong Kong has attempted to increase the supply of public housing,...
Redevelopment in Hong Kong must be accelerated in response to urban decay and land shortages. Howeve...
published_or_final_versionUrban PlanningMasterMaster of Science in Urban Plannin
published_or_final_versionUrban PlanningMasterMaster of Science in Urban Plannin
Growth polarities of the city into centralised and decentralised forms have been synonymous as the b...
This study evaluates the land-use zoning and development of open space in the hyper-dense, land-hung...
London may have passed its historical 1939 peak population just under a year ago, but despite being ...
This dissertation explores the urbanism of Hong Kong between 1967 and 1997, tracing the history of H...
Population wise, Hong Kong has too many people on too small a physical entity—1,075 square kilometer...
Urban studies scholarship on Hong Kong fairly explains the urban transformations and transitions dur...
The increased concentration of urban populations is a global phenomenon. Hong Kong, like many Asian ...
This subject has been chosen because the housing density in South East Asia is incredibly high, part...
Because of its grave implication within the economic and social development of a community, inadequa...
This paper offers an approach to understanding high-density living in precarious housing. Developing...
Rapid population growth and critical land shortage were often considered as the two fundamental forc...
In recent years, the government of Hong Kong has attempted to increase the supply of public housing,...
Redevelopment in Hong Kong must be accelerated in response to urban decay and land shortages. Howeve...
published_or_final_versionUrban PlanningMasterMaster of Science in Urban Plannin
published_or_final_versionUrban PlanningMasterMaster of Science in Urban Plannin
Growth polarities of the city into centralised and decentralised forms have been synonymous as the b...
This study evaluates the land-use zoning and development of open space in the hyper-dense, land-hung...
London may have passed its historical 1939 peak population just under a year ago, but despite being ...
This dissertation explores the urbanism of Hong Kong between 1967 and 1997, tracing the history of H...
Population wise, Hong Kong has too many people on too small a physical entity—1,075 square kilometer...
Urban studies scholarship on Hong Kong fairly explains the urban transformations and transitions dur...