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Flexibility in Hong Kong Private Housing

T. H. Khan (Department of Architecture, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Malaysia)
T. K. Dhar (Department of Architecture, Khulna University, Khulna, Bangladesh)

Open House International

ISSN: 0168-2601

Article publication date: 1 September 2012

42

Abstract

This paper investigates the private housing in Hong Kong in terms of flexibility. Since the last few decades Hong Kong Government is steadily endeavoring to achieve a sustained and healthy development of private housing property market. With Hong Kong's economy on the rise, and its fertility rate being one of the lowest in the world, more people are looking for increased space standards even for higher price. Currently, around two-third of the population of Hong Kong lives in private flats. However, it is observed that these flats, especially the highrise housing estates do not come as open shell like the public housing estates do. This paper at first identifies the major prototypes of contemporary private housings built in the past few decades. Then it compares the flexibility of different prototypes in four sequential levels of construction i.e structure, envelop, building services and infill. Flexibility is measured by means of potential layout options that the users practice inside these prototypes. It finds that some prototypes offer more flexibility than the others. It concludes that flexibility in recent private flats is gradually reducing. But on a positive note, they are offering more varieties in size and layout design in order to meet the increasing demand in spatial standards.

Keywords

Citation

Khan, T.H. and Dhar, T.K. (2012), "Flexibility in Hong Kong Private Housing", Open House International, Vol. 37 No. 3, pp. 48-59. https://doi.org/10.1108/OHI-03-2012-B0006

Publisher

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Open House International

Copyright © 2012 Open House International

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