Chungking Mansions launched as a beacon of prosperity in jet-set era Hong Kong. The building’s fame slid into notoriety soon after, and it has lived for 55 years in the spotlight. Many Hong Kong people avoid it, given its reputed sleazy underbelly, or know it only as a multi-storey souk offering exotic flavours and a cheap bed for an hour or more.
But it may disappear from the landscape within a decade, according to those who keep it running.
As the building approaches its November 11 birthday, it is facing an uncertain future. With this project, the South China Morning Post aims to test the myths that surround this building against reality.
What we found has been described as an ecosystem and as a ghetto. An Indian trader remarked to the Post that after staying inside Chungking Mansions for a month, the only thing that he couldn’t find within its walls was “peace of mind”.
Efforts to clean up its image have lifted the building out of its gangland dominated past. And while problems remain, the importance of this building to Hong Kong and those who visit the city remains clear in the stampede of foot traffic that passes through its doors every day.
Designed for function without flair, the building’s heritage remains formally unrecognised or protected. The value of Chungking Mansions is in its people, not its materials. And the materials of Chungking Mansions themselves are, some say, reaching the end of their lifetime.
Chungking Mansions opened in November 1961 during an era of rapid growth in industry, immigration and jet-age tourism to British Hong Kong.
Soon after, the second floor became “The Hongkong Shopping Mart”, catering to tourists with high-end needs, while the basement hosted nightclubs with magicians and hostesses making it a magnet for visiting sailors.
Safety has always been something of an afterthought here, with the building’s rabbit-warren design making it a potent fire hazard.
In 1966, its first major blaze broke out, filling halls with thick smoke and forcing many of its 6,000 residents onto the street – still more blithely ignored the sirens.
The fire caused millions of dollars worth of damage. Dozens more costly blazes were to come.