Man Wah Sun Chuen (Chinese: 文華新村) is a private housing estate in Ferry Point, next to Yau Ma Tei or Jordan/Kwun Chung on the west side of Kowloon in Hong Kong. On west side of a section of Ferry Street between Jordan Road and Saigon Street, it was near the former Jordan Road Ferry Pier, now replaced by MTR Austin station of Tuen Ma line and West Kowloon Station. It is where the area Ferry Point got its name.
Formerly the site of the warehouse of Yaumatei Ferry Pier on the reclaimed land of West Jordan, Man Wah Sun Chuen has a total of eight blocks built in 1960s and it is one of the oldest private housing estates in Hong Kong. It used be by the side of Victoria Harbour and Yau Ma Tei Typhoon Shelter, before the West Kowloon Reclamation was completed in the 1990s.
The estate, developed by Ka Lin Real Estate, was designed by architect Eric Byron Cumine, who designed many buildings in Hong Kong such as former Kai Tai Airport, Harbour City, and also Casino Lisboa in Macau. The design was under the influence of Building (Planning) Regulations in 1955, enacted in 1966, which relaxed the height limit and allow denser buildings. Each block of flats, comparable to the scale of Unité d'habitation in Marseilles, contains 419 flats accommodating more than 1300 people. With total of eight blocks of eighteen storeys, it was expected to be the home of forty thousand people, reported in the Kung Sheung Daily News in 1963. The slant top setback was subject the regulation of right of light at that time, and the Bauhaus castle-like estate stood against the shoreline was spectacular.
The estate was expensive but welcomed by middle class of that time, where famous actors like Sammo Hung, Stephen Chow and Jackie Chan once lived there. As time goes by, the estate became more grassroots.
See also
References
- ^ "佐敦道碼頭傍興建新往宅區擬定名渡船角 發展計劃包括美化佐敦碼頭廣塲,擴大巴士總站,增加廣場面積,填海十餘萬方呎,興建大厦八大座,可容居民四萬人。". 工商日報. 1964-06-08. p. 6.
- Hong Kong Place - Man Wah Sun Chuen (Chinese)
- ^ Seng, Eunice Mei Feng (2017). "The City in a Building: A Brief Social History of Hong Kong" (PDF). Marginalia: Limits within the Urban Realm – Studies in History and Theory of Architecture. 5: 81-98.
- "10 Most Liked 十築香港". www.10mostlikedarchitecture.hk. Retrieved 2024-12-04.
- ^ DeWolf, Christopher (31 July 2017). "How Hong Kong estate once home to Jackie Chan helped change the course of housing development in the city". South China Morning Post.
External links
22°18′27″N 114°09′59″E / 22.307529°N 114.166262°E / 22.307529; 114.166262