Tokwawan Community Living Room

Tokwawan, Hong Kong

Tokwawan is an area of Hong Kong facing significant urban redevelopment. Older low-rise buildings are purchased by developers to be rebuilt as speculative high-rise residential towers with the process being facilitated by a statutory body that encourages redevelopment. In the current period, a complex influx of affluent residents, minority groups, and migrants from China are affecting the social and cultural fabric, as well as the physical urban environment. For this project we propose a community living room to address the conflicts in the area; by allowing different communities to coexist and engage with one another, we question what development can mean and ask if gentrification is inevitable.

Using workshops as a research tool, we engage with existing communities to understand the architectural and cultural quality of the area – including craftsmanship, textures, and human relationships. Our proposed design is a structure that may appear temporary – like a bamboo scaffolding, which could be taken down anytime – yet could stand resilient for the next 30 years. The structure takes the ideas of permanence and transience and acts as a community gathering point under an existing flyover area. The unfinished structure allows different people to adapt it, give it life, and possibly take ownership.

For the incoming community, the structure may be a museum of culture for learning about an old way of life; for the existing community, it may be an area to express their craftmanship and safeguard their interests. Will there be winners and losers, or can all communities live in harmony?

Date:
May 2015 – 2017
Initiated By:
St. James’ Settlement
Main Donor:
Urban Renewal Fund
Size:
2 sites
Site Area:
Team:
Maggie Ma, Mark Kingsley, Hannah Yim
Photography:
DOMAT