Hong Kong’s stratospheric property prices are pushing some residents beyond the law.
A small, but significant number of younger people are living in industrial buildings, trading comfort and convenience for cheap rent.
Along with irritations such as rust-tainted water and intermittent blackouts, there is one major drawback: Such living arrangements are illegal.
Photo: Bloomberg
It is a risk 32-year-old photographer Wah Lee is willing to take. While he shares his building near the Sha Tin Racecourse with a Chinese herbal-oil storage unit and a commercial kitchen pumping out roast meats, he and his roommate pay about HK$11,000 (US$1,400) a month in rent, less than half of what a residential unit in the area goes for.
Along with a small kitchen and private bathroom, the 93m2 apartment features high ceilings and large windows, unusual by the standards of Hong Kong’s often poky apartments.
“The rents nowadays are very unreasonable,” Lee said. “There’s no way for me to afford those residential units.”
Another advantage: He is able to store his photography gear and shoot pictures at home because of the generous space.
This version of industrial chic is just another way Hong Kong residents are trying to beat the world’s most expensive housing prices, with the average home costing 19.4 times the territory’s median annual income, according to Demographia.
Sky-high prices have given rise to the micro-apartment and dormitory-style “coliving” spaces.
Demand for units smaller than two car-parking spaces has surged this year as costs continue their relentless climb.
While the government has been reviewing 18 options to increase land supply in a bid to tame housing prices and avert social unrest, allowing people to legally live in industrial buildings is not on the list. Instead, proposals range from reclaiming more land near Victoria Harbour to building homes on top of a container terminal.
“Industrial buildings are not designed to be lived in,” Chau Kwong Wing (鄒廣榮), chair professor of real estate and construction at the University of Hong Kong and a member of the task force on land supply, said in an interview. “It involves safety concerns.”
Those risks were highlighted when a fire in August last year ripped through a unit in an industrial building in the New Territories, killing three people.
The apartment was found to be one of 17 subdivided units on the floor.
An estimated 12,000 people lived in industrial buildings in 2016, according to the Society for Community Organization, an advocacy group.
The organization has not updated its estimate in the past few years, but expects the number to have dwindled due to heightened inspections by the government, said Angela Lui, a community organizer at the group.
While building owners and tenants are required to end any domestic use if found to be renting industrial buildings for residential purposes, the government last year proposed introducing criminal sanctions.
The plan, if finalized, can be put forward for approval at the earliest in the coming legislative year starting in October.
That has not deterred 23-year-old Ting Li, who lives with her boyfriend in a 18.5m2 apartment inside an industrial building in Sha Tin.
In addition to potential eviction, the couple has to deal with problems regular Hong Kong residents do not come across.
“The running water will somehow come out yellowy on the weekend, so we have to drink bottled water,” she said.
Not only that, power occasionally cuts out after working hours, meaning the air-conditioning will not operate in a territory known for its hot and steamy weather.
“It’s more comfortable to live around people in a residential area,” Li said. “I used to wake up and hear chirping of birds, now I only hear people coming into their offices.”
However, the young couple are not planning on moving out any time soon, as they pay just HK$5,000 a month in rent, or just 15 percent of their combined income.
Renting a residential apartment elsewhere would chew up 40 percent of their wages.
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