Showing posts with label Hong Kong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hong Kong. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 27, 2016

Hongkong The Race Course Fire Memorial in So Kon Po History

The Race Course Fire Memorial was one of those things that I knew was around but had never really had the chance to visit, and then once I had the time it had really been pushed from my mind. It's only since last year when it was finally gazetted s a Government monument that it wriggled back into my mind and noted as a thing to make an effort to see. It's only taken me 10 or so years but I took an opportunity the other day to pop up and see the place with my own eyes.

It's not so convenient to get to because it's up on the hillside behind the Hong Kong Stadium in So Kon Po and this means it is a fair distance from public transport and out of sight and mind for most people. And, as nicely demonstrated by me, even those who know about it need to make a special effort to visit.

The memorial was built in 1922 to remember all those who perished during a catastrophic fire that swept through a temporary mat shed stand at Happy Valley racecourse in February 1918. It's not clear what the official death toll was and various reports put it anywhere between 570 and 600. Given the damage that fire can cause it's likely there are victims that have never been properly identified so I would guess the higher number is perhaps closer to the real figure. There is actually a very detailed description of the tragic events over on Gwulo.com (quite apt because I was visiting this site with David Bellis, Gwulo's ever-inquisitive owner). 

Those bodies that were recovered were placed in a communal grave - the site upon which the HK Stadium now stands. According to the ever useful (but not necessarily accurate) wikipedia, when the building of the original HK Stadium commenced in 1953, the bodies were moved to Aberdeen. However I can't seem to verify this and the details seem a bit vague. Moved to Aberdeen Cemetery? If so where? I will have to make a long needed visit to the place and investigate.


Anyway, those lucky enough to be identified have had their names engraved into two stone tablets that form the memorials centrepiece. The writing in the centre - ?????? - roughly translates as Chinese and foreign men and women victim's memorial. On the left appears to be all the female names and on the right it looks as though the men have been listed along with their Ancestral village names (offering a brief insight into the fact that a woman's ancestry in HK and China didn't matter - funnily enough it still doesn't as many a female indigenous villager will be able to tell you).

Memorial centrepiece

Actually, the bottom word ? (mou) is used to describe both a tomb or a memorial in Chinese, so I guess the distinction in HK isn't as pronounced as in the West.

I can't find any foreign names on the either of the tablets, so either all the victims were Chinese or there are some foreigners in there who adopted (or were given by those responsible for the memorial) Chinese names. However, my knowledge of Chinese names is fairly scratchy so it is possible some of the Chinese readers out there will be able to zoom in on the picture above and spot something that might indicate a foreigner. If you can please let me know.


To reach the site you need to head over to HK Stadium (closest MTR is Causeway Bay) and once at the front of the stadium, walk to the left hand side. The memorial is signposted and the signs say it is closed between 12 and 1pm. We actually arrived at smack on 12 and were a bit worried we were too late (especially as the walk uphill takes up a fair few minutes) but actually everything was open.

Even if it was closed, I fail to see how you can be stopped from entering given the fact that the outer wall is only thigh height (see below).

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Hongkong Woodside, Mount Parker Road History

Several years ago, I posted a small and fairly insignificant post on my old blog about Woodside - the large red brick Colonial mansion that sits a little way up Mount Parker Road in Quarry Bay.  At the time (2008) the house was intact but seemingly empty and had already been given a Grade 2 listing back in 1998. Though small, the post was enough to trigger some really interesting comments from past tenants and it would be a great shame if they were lost. The benefit of this repost is to note that the building was re-opened to the general public in 2012 as the AFCD Biodiversity Discovery Centre. I did make an unplanned trip a year or so ago but unfortunately didn't have my camera with me.

Woodside's history dates back to the 1920's when Swire purchased the land in 1922 and built the property for two of the sub-managers (and their families) of the Tai Koo Sugar Refinery (one of Swire's many business interests). The original house was actually two adjoining properties but is now a single structure. It's not clear when the refinery closed but it appears that sometime in the early 70's it ceased operations. The land on which the refinery sat was eventually redeveloped into today's Tai Koo Shing - I guess even back in the 70's, property development was more profitable than refining sugar. Other buildings and facilities used by the refinery were also redeveloped, such as the similarly red-bricked Kornhill (you can see the it on Andrew Tse's excellent FLICKR stream), the Quarry Bay Workers Village, Stanley Terrace and the reservoir (the latter was emptied and turned into Mount Parker Lodge development).


It's not clear why Woodside managed to evade the fate of the other buildings within the Tai Koo Refinery area, but perhaps it was because the access road (Mount Parker Road) wasn't wide enough to be feasible for large scale development? I guess it no longer matters,at least for the time being (note that the building hasn't been graded as a 'protected' monument, and in fact hasn't even been given a Grade 1 listing...go figure!)


Luckily, for a change, the Govt has done decent job at turning it into the Biodiversity centre. although the addition of an internal lift may be one of the reasons why the building can't be declared a monument - perhaps it had to be changed too drastically internally to allow its adaptive reuse?

As mentioned on the original post, my buddy Mark was pals with someone who used to live here and when everyone moved out the contents of the library were up for grabs. Mark got there and managed to grab a dog-eared copy of Michael Crichton's Jurassic Park, only to find out the inside had been hollowed out in order stuff (who knows what was in there?).


Here are some of the memories of others who posted on the original article.

Adrian Says:
I�ve a lot of memory of this old bldg...within the Tai Tam Country Park, there are some sites...built for British army used during WW2 including hidden tunnels linked between hills in Mt Parker. Furthermore, the 4 buildings ( Tai Hing, Tai Lung Tai Shing & Tai Chau Bldg. ) on Quarry Bay Street were former staff quarters for Taikoo Sugar Refinery Ltd & Taikoo Dock Ltd. and there are one more former quarters site at Sai Wai Ho & one near Taikoo MTR station.
I think Adrian may be referring to the various wartime stove sites that can be found in the vicinity. There are three large clearings that house large brick built (red brick, so perhaps constructed from leftover material after the refinery buildings were built?). Here's an example below.


Also, Adrian mentions the tunnels and I wonder if he also means the tunnels that David Bellis writes (on Gwulo.com) about near the Hong Pak Trail? [EDIT: James Porteous has let me know that the wartime tunnels Adrian is referring to are the ones south of Siu Ma Shan between Tai Fung Au (Quarry Gap) and Jardine's Lookout]

Irene Says:
I lived in the house for about a year when my Father was manager of Taikoo Sugar Refinery in 1968/69. When I stayed at Woodside I was only 13 years old [but] I do recall a rockery garden to the side of the house where there was a display of nursery rhyme figurines. I also remember the small swimming pool in front of the house and the extensive vegetable/flower gardens. At the end of the gardens there was a lookout where I used to watch the planes at Kai Tak Airport.
I'm fairly certain the pool has long since gone but the garden has been tidied up by the AFCD and serves as a pleasant place to sit and relax for a while - especially if you are tackling the steep climb up to Quarry Gap. If there is still a lookout in the garden then the view will most likely be completely obscured by the trees that now surround the property.

Adrienne Says:
I was born in Hong Kong in 1952. At that time, my parents were living in Woodside House with friends of theirs until they finally moved to their own house on the Peak. I often visited it afterwards as a little girl and was always afraid of eventually coming across a porcupine which were known to roam the garden after coming down from the hills. By the way, my mother�s ballet school � Carol Bateman School of Ballet � at the Helena May on Garden Road still exists today.
Adrienne did mention she may have some pictures of Woodside, however, I suspect the sudden end of my old blog perhaps cut short our ability to see them. However, she has been kind enough to share some of her memorabilia over on Gwulo.com and you can see them by clicking here.

Geoff also shared some of his memories on the old post, but best of all is that he also loaded up some of his photos over at Gwulo.com as well. You can see Geoff's pictures here, but here are some of his memories he kindly shared in the comments.
I was a 16 y.o. when I left in 1959. My father was Head of the Heavy Machine Workshop at Taikoo, building Taikoo Doxford engines for the new ships and carrying out major engine room repairs. Before that, he had been Taikoo's Senior Harbour Engineer based at Butterfield and Swire's offices in Connaught Rd - at that time on the CBD waterfront. He was the only Australian at Taikoo, which he had arranged to join whilst calling at HK on 29 November 1941 (10 days before the Japanese invasion, by which time his ship had - fortunately - left), so he was unable to take up the appointment until September 1945 after which he was very involved in the reconstruction of the dockyard. 
I lived at Stanley Terrace from 1946-59, went to Quarry Bay School and King George V School, and spent a lot of my spare time at and around the Taikoo Club and Woodside as well as roaming the hills with my dog. There would have been 30 or so mainly Scottish kids living at Stanley Terrace. My mother's family had lived in HK since 1919, her father was a ship's captain.
The Taikoo Dockyard Summer 1962 journal ( no. 16) had an excellent colour photo on its cover depicting the valleys and hillsides as they were, back from the dockyard across the Taikoo Club grounds, to Stanley Terrace (3 buildings), the �front� dam as we used to call it, Taikoo workers village, and Woodside. Doesn't quite show Kornhill or Quarry Bay School. I have a photocopy of the cover � and might even be able to turn up the original � if you are interested and cannot locate the journal in HK. I lived at Stanley Terrace in the 1940s and 50s, and early on used to visit the Fords (Sugar Refinery Chief Engineer) at Woodside and later played tennis there with Gary Beattie whose father was Manager of TSR. I called in to have a quick look when I was in HK in March, having recently discovered it was still standing.
Actually, since Geoff posted these comments he also kindly loaded up the above mentioned journal cover to Gwulo.com and you can find it at the following link: http://gwulo.com/atom/20455. It's really interesting to compare Quarry Bay now with how it used to be and about the only thing that can still; be recognised is Woodside!

Angel Says:
...I have just spoken with the amah �Hing jie� who worked at Woodside for Mr Clarke around 1951-57. She later married the cook of Mr Ford. She told me the names of Beattie (a tall guy and successor of Mr Clarke) and the Fords (living in the other unit of Woodside, with a teen daughter). She also remembered the tennis court close to the mountain side and veggies were grown at the backyard. 
Brenda Says:
I don�t know if you can read Chinese. Gary Wong�s Film Pilgrimage carries an entry in Dec 2011 on two movies shot in Woodside House:
1) 92 Legendary La Rose Noire (92 ???????) directed by Joseph Chan (???) and with movie stars Tony Leung Ka Fai, etc.
2) Dance of a dream (????) directed by Andrew Lau (???) in 2001 with movie stars Andy Lau, Sandra Ng, and the late Anita Mui.
Thanks Brenda for the heads up, yes, I know Gary and have his book so many thanks for mentioning it. I would also like to add that it was also seen briefly in the 1997 Chinese Box starring Jeremy Irons, Gong Li and Maggie Cheung. You can see a post I did for it over on my other blog here.

And finally, to finish on a mystery, one of the last comments I received on the old blog before I pulled the plug was this one from Rose Gibson who asked me if I knew what happened to the remains of a man who was buried in Woodside's garden?

From what I gather from Rose's comments and subsequent information that came from Gwulo, it looks as though Roses father - Theodore Leslie Bell - a civilian who was shot and killed by the Japanese during the fighting on 19th December 1941. It seems that Bell's body was lost and Rose was under the impression that he may have been given a hasty and unofficial burial in an unmarked grave inside the grounds of Woodside. If anyone has any information it would be great to get to the bottom of it.

Saturday, October 3, 2015

Hongkong Google Earth now has Hong Kong in 3D! History

Many thanks to Gweilo8888 for the heads up. It appears that Google has finally got around to adding Hong Kong to its growing list of cities that now have 3D views. I'm already a big fan of Googleearth and Streetview and the fact that it allows me to quickly check places has been a real plus for all my film locations posts, but now to see a large portion of the place also rendered in fairly detailed 3D is just fantastic.




Yes, I know we have always had the 3D buildings modeled by various individuals but this new technology can model large swathes of the place with pretty good detail. I had been impressed by the same facility that had been done on London and elsewhere, but what better place to do it than somewhere like Hong Kong with its abundance of tall buildings.

At the moment the scope of the 3D rendering covers all of the Kowloon peninsula including Kowloon Bay, as well as Shatin and Tai Po in the New Territories and what looks to be most of the coastline around HK Island. Here's a few screen grabs so you can see for yourself.

Kowloon Peninsula

The Peninsula close up

Kowloon Tong

The following two pictures show the difference between the 2D and 3D modes of the same part of Hong Kong Island. 


And finally a fairly decent shot of a part of Hong Kong Island. It is possible to zoom right down into the streets but the rendering still needs a bit of work (such as on spaces under bridges) but it is still really impressive and may prove quite useful to me for getting better identification of buildings. We shall see.  

Monday, March 16, 2015

Hongkong The American Club and Enter the Dragon History

A few of the more popular posts from my old blog covered the topic of the location used for filming the tournament scenes in Enter the Dragon. It seems that for a lot of people this topic never gets old, and people still contact me about it quite regularly - especially so since I took the old posts offline. In the interests of Lee fans around the world and to avoid several overlapping posts, I've merged them together into a single consolidated post below, which has also given me the chance to relook at some things and include some pictures I left out first time round.

So, just how much of the tournament grounds from Enter the Dragon still exist? The answer is, sadly, absolutely nothing since the whole area was redeveloped into two main sites: The American Club and Pacific View apartments. But thankfully some glimpses of the place's kung fu past can still be found if you look hard enough.

 Stanley Lodge, Tytam Villa and Palm Villa from above (Source: HK Govt)

The American Club is actually sitting on a several originally separate plots previously occupied by three very large and expansive mansions: Stanley Lodge, Tytam Villa, and Palm Villa. According to Eric Ho's book Tracing my Children's Lineage, the mansions had undergone various changes in ownership within the rather vast and varied offshoots/branches of the Ho Tung dynasty. By the 1980's it was the Lo's who owned Stanley Lodge and Palm Villa. Regardless, the land for all three buildings was sold to the American Club and their new country club premise was built and opened in 1984. I've marked out the approximate extent of each mansion and grounds on the picture below. As you can see, Palm Villa with its stepped courts occupied the largest plot of land.



If you read my film locations blog you should be aware that Tytam Villa popped up in the Chuck Norris film Forced Vegeance, and most savvy Lee fans should know that it was Palm Villa whose grounds were used for the filming of Enter the Dragon. I haven't found any films that used Stanley Lodge yet, but if you know of one please let me know :-)

Palm Villa's tennis courts became the outdoor location for the tournament scenes quite by luck. It seems that Lee and other members of the production crew were out scouting for possible places when they noticed the tennis courts. They stopped off and soon discovered the property was being looked after by M.W. Lo. It must have been serendipity that Lo was a distant relative of Bruce through marriage*. The property was actually owned by the elder brother, M.K, who had died in 1959, so I'm not sure what ownership the house was under at the time - perhaps under some sort of family trust?

Anyway,  M.W was the estate's custodian and was also a well-regarded local attorney with the family law firm Lo & Lo � set up by M.K in 1915. This firm, incidentally, was the one employed by Bruce to deal with his legal matters up to the time of his death, after which they were unceremoniously dumped in favour of Adrian Marshall. Hmmm

Well, when M.W. wasn�t practicing law he was practising his back swing and was quite the expert winning several local tennis tournaments and even competing with M.K. and their sister in doubles competitions. In fact, he is one of the enshrinees at the Hong Kong Tennis Association Hall of Fame. On the old blog post I had quite a few interesting comments from people who used to play tennis with M.W. and his family and have copied them below for posterity.
Jeff: This brings back some memories! I used to play tennis at these courts with M.W and his son Ken, and many other friends, every Sunday afternoon. I recall the courts being converted for the Bruce Lee movie, and we all had our photographs taken sitting on the large throne chair on one of the courts.
Kiska: M.W�s house was called Longview and was on the opposite side of the road to the American Club...I still have old cine film at M.W�s Sunday tennis parties. Only men were allowed to play tennis on his courts with the exception of Wimbledon lady winners, but we ordinary ladies were included in the social activities. I was invited to dinner and bridge at his house on several occasions...M.W was truly the grand old man of tennis and I remember him very fondly. He was also an intrepid bridge player and took me to the cleaners more than once!
Peter: I�m M.W Lo�s grandson, now living in New Zealand. I was fascinated to read that you have some movie footage of the tennis parties. My father and brothers used to play at those tennis matches...
Longview (#45 Tai Tam Road) is mentioned by Kiska above as being M.W's house, this is true and it was still there until a few years ago when it was sold and developed into several smaller (but still massive) properties. In fact, there is a brief glimpse of Longview in Enter the Dragon - blink and you'll miss it - see below. It pops into view just after Bruce breaks Bob's Wall neck. Crunch! When M.W died in 1986, it was sold on. More recently a company called National Electronics Holdings Limited got hold of the place and they are the ones who have just ripped it down. It's a big shame because it was a lovely looking house and reportedly had the very last grass tennis court in HK (for those who don't know, grass is a very rare thing in HK). It can also be seen on the aerial picture - it's the white property in the bottom right of that photograph.

M.W.Lo's other house, Longview, in the background.

Anyway, getting back to Palm Villa and the tennis courts. Fans would probably like to know which actual bits of it were used on film. So to help, I've put some legends on the picture of the estate.


As you can see the grounds had three grass tennis courts, marked upper, middle and lower. Most of the fighting action, and where Han's throne was sited, was in the middle court. Here's a reminder from the film itself to give you a bit of context.

The lower tennis court
The middle court (where the main action was)

Upper court at the back. The middle and upper courts
were separated by the fountain (on the right)

I just mentioned the fountain, and I also marked it on the aerial picture because this smaller enclosure also featured on film when Lee's character leaps up into a tree to avoid detection in a dodgy bit of reverse film editing. The fountain area has a circular pond in its centre and during filming this contained the tree he leapt from. Anyway, it looked like it also used to hold a fountain - hence the name I have given it to distinguish it from the private garden adjacent to the mansion. This is the small lawn that was immediately adjacent to the mansion. Sadly, I don't think any of this area was used for filming, although it's possible some of the night scenes, when Lee goes exploring, could have been filmed in there. Regardless, we'll come back to the garden later because it is the only remaining part of the estate that is now part of the American Club.

When the Palm Villa site was sold, it was actually broken up into three separate plots. The main plot, bought by the American Club, consisted of the Villa and its adjacent garden. This plot and the neighbouring plots with Tytam Villa and Stanley Lodge now contain the entirety of the club's grounds. The second plot consisted of the enclosure with the fountain and two of the three tennis courts. The upper court was seemingly split down the middle for the sake of redevelopment. This second plot was later sold on to Sun Hung Kai Properties - a developer that was just recently the centre of a bribery scandal and court case - and was redeveloped into the present day Pacific View apartment complex.

The third plot of land consisted of a sliver of land between the other two sites and included part of the upper tennis court. It's essentially the strip of land that separates the two redeveloped areas and it was retained by the Govt. The American Club actually leases this land back from the Govt on a rolling 3-month basis. The reason for this short lease is that the Govt has been planning to reroute the Tai Tam Road between Pacific View and The American Club in order to remove the nasty bend in the road. Personally, I think the idea is a bit dumb, but that's HK Govt planning for you. The fact that nothing has been done about it in all these years is perhaps an indication that it won't happen. I'm sure I will regret saying that some day.

It's down this small sliver of land that a public pathway has been constructed so that you can access the pebbly beach at the bottom. You remember the beach, don't you? It's where the characters in the film disembark their junk to a stone jetty and walk the path up to Han's fortress. It was also used in the beginning of the film when you see the frogman pulling the girl's body out of the water. This is about the only part of the area that has remained undeveloped (that is, until they slap that road right through the middle). On an aside, Pillbox 029 is also situated right here too, next to the stone jetty. So war buffs also have something to wander down to and have a look. Here are a few pictures of the area from 2011, starting with the gate on Tai Tam Road that leads you down to the beach.


The beach as seen from The American Club terrace

Pillbox #29 also has a brief cameo in the film

Pillbox, small cutting and stone jetty seen from the beach

This place looks familiar...
oh yes, that's right!


This latter shot shows you just how much Pacific View encroaches upon the old tennis court area. The pink base you can see sits on the site where the lower court was. I suspect that the site formation for this development involved excavating down to a flat base before the building work could start - unless anyone living at Pacific View is able to confirm that the building is on a stepped/sloped base?

So as you can see, it has all gone. Just the beach and jetty remain. But what about inside the club? Well, as mentioned earlier, none of the film seems to have been shot within the perimeter of the American Club. I did postulate (in the previous incarnation of this post) that the night time scenes may have utilised some of the estates other parts but I'm not so convinced anymore. Even if it did, I have no real reference for comparison because everything has gone. Anyway, on my trip to the club in 2011, I did take a few pictures, so I'll leave it to you to judge if anything can be recognised.

So here we are at the former garden area. Well, as mentioned this is the only part of the old estate that is still in-situ. It even still has the very distinctive coral-topped walls that were used in the construction of all the estates walls - apparently the coral was taken from the sea below and brought up during construction. Here is what is inside the garden - it has now been converted into a small sports ground for basketball and the like.

This is at the end closest to Tai Tam Road.

The wall constructed of stones and topped with coral.

Wall furthest from the road (closer to the coast)

Okay, so this wall is the original one and if you look closely on my aerial picture below you will see the curve of it around the garden.


The garden itself has been resurfaced into an all weather pitch and the wall has had the green mesh fence put on top - no doubt to prevent over-zealous Lee fans (I know a few) from jumping the wall in the mistaken belief they are treading on hallowed ground. There are a couple of interesting things nearby. On the other side of the curved wall - essentially outside of the clubs grounds but still on their leased-back sliver - is a small round out house (i.e. toilet block). You can just make it out on the picture above below the red line, but here is a close-up taken whilst precariously perched on some tableware - hence the green mesh that crept into view.


Here is where the fans should get excited because this building can be seen in several shots as the cameras positioned in the middle tennis court looking back in the direction of the house. I have since learned that this building was in fact taken as a dressing room by Ahna Capri herself. Now, the rumours are that Bruce got a bit pee'd off by this news - after all he was the star of the film - and demanded a dressing room for himself. The compromise was that he shared this room with Ahna and...well, you know Bruce and his reputation with women. Let's just say...hmmm...nothing ;o)

If you are mad enough you can reach this out house from the beach and/or pathway down to the beach. It takes a bit of bushwhacking but it has been accomplished by several people I know. You can see the out house's nice clean white top on the screen grab below, poking just over the wall of the middle tennis court. Compare that to 40 years of neglect in the picture above.

The out-house - aka Ahna and Bruce's shared dressing room

Moving on and I took a couple of pictures from the top of the strange pavilion at the other end of the old garden. The steps in the picture below lead up the back of the structure onto the small roof terrace. I'm still not sure if this place was seen on camera, maybe just brief snippets, I don't know, but the view from the top gives a better impression of the extent of the old garden (lower picture). Note the new section of wall on the left.



Just to the left of the new section of wall (of camera, far left) is the single remaining curved arch doorway that will be familiar to anyone who has seen the film. The estate's grounds had them wherever a doorway was needed. Sadly I neglected to take a picture, mainly because it had been bricked up, but if you are down this way you can see the other side of from the pavement outside. What is curious is that on the club side of the doorway is the following brass plaque.


Now, when John Little was filming here for his In Pursuit of the Dragon documentary in August 2009, he told me there was no plaque, but when I visited in March 2011 it was on the wall. I wonder if it was John's recent interest that had spurred the club to put up this commemorative plate? Well, it doesn't matter because the fact is that the plaque isn't really that accurate given that all the 'most famous Kung Fu fights in movie history' were actually filmed on the other side of the wall on a site that has long since been redeveloped.

Hmm, funny that they didn't mention Men of the Dragon though...I wonder why :-)

* M.W. Lo's older brother, M.K. Lo, had married one of Sir Robert Ho Tung's daughters. Bruce's mother, Grace, was the daughter - natural or adopted, it's open for debate - of Sir Robert's half-brother, Ho Kom Tong. It gets very confusing because there are literally hundreds of members in this particular family tree.

Friday, November 7, 2014

Hongkong King Yin Lei, Wanchai History

It's probably fair to say that of all the buildings in Hong Kong, King Yin Lei has held my fascination for the longest time. Of course, when I first saw the place I was only about 12 years old and it was the intriguing fortress of an evil drug-producing ex-member of the Shaolin temple who, sadly, ended up skewered on the end of a spear courtesy of a kick by Bruce Lee. But it was my, some might say, "unhealthy" obsession with that film (it was Enter the Dragon in case you hadn't guessed) that really kick-started my whole Hong Kong obsession and ultimately led me to come and live here.



On a few earlier trips out I had tried to find out where this building was and failed miserably. It wasn't until I finally moved here in 2006 that I finally stumbled across it, by accident, on a trip up to the Peak one day on the #15 bus. It's at 45 Stubbs Road.


Since that day, not only have I found a couple of other on-screen uses of it (see later), but also followed with great interest the events that began to unfold in 2007 when its long term owner, Stephen Yow Mok-shing, sold it. What followed the sale was a rather sorry indictment of the way the HK Govt often works (or doesn't work, as the case may be).

Mr Yow had bought the property in the mid-70's as an investment and he and his family had spent various amounts of time there over the years, but the upkeep and maintenance was getting a bit too much and so it was considered a good time to sell. House prices in HK were at a pretty good level and the eventual sale price exceeded, I believe, HK$400m+. I suspect that that price was a pretty good return on investment for the Yow's.

Taken in 2009 after the new roof tiles had been attached 

Unfortunately for the conservation minded, inevitably, the new owner had no intention of keeping the place and just wanted the land for redevelopment and in a rather sneaky bit of cynical manipulation he set about readying the place for demolition. It took a few days for people to notice but all of a sudden some rather large holes started appearing in the external walls, the old window frames were ripped out but most disastrously, the glazed green roof tiles were smashed to pieces and dumped. In hindsight it seems to be that the owner was being careful about not knocking it down straight away but damaging it to the point whereby saving it would be deemed useless by the Govt. It may or may not be a coincidence that the secretive new owner, who'd bought the property via on offshore shell company called Ice Wisdom, was later outed as Cheung Chung-Kiu - a Mainland property developer with very close ties to Donald Tsang's then HK Govt.



In true face saving and buck-passing fashion that people in Hong Kong know so well, the Govt were very quick to lay the blame on the former owner, Stephen Yow. They explained - in this case correctly - that the building was privately owned and therefore they had no way to intercede in the matter. What they neglected to mention - other than their close links to the new owner - was that Stephen Yow had already made several attempts to offer the building for sale to the Govt in order to secure its preservation. This fact didn't come out until several days later, after the Govt had already denied this was the case and after Mr Yow was vilified in the local press as a result of their denial.


Eventually, someone finally owned up to this fact and everyone decided to turn their attention on who the new owner might be (it was still unknown at this point, at least to the general public). What followed was the Govt realising they had to eat some humble pie and make some effort to reach and agreement with the new owner over the building's future and a land swap deal was struck by which an adjacent piece of land of similar size and plot ratio was exchanged for the building. What surprised me about it all was that Ice Wisdom agreed to stump up for the costs of repairing the damage that had been done to King Yin Lei. The place was declared a Monument (protecting it, in theory, from future demolition) and a massive renovation project was launched to fix the holes and restore the roof to its former glory. The building disappeared under blue tarpaulin for a long time before being reopened to the public in 2011. Yes, the place was so damaged it took 3 years to fix!



The restoration project was run by Professor Tang Guo-hua from Guangzhou University and involved work that could only be done by skilled artisans from as far away as Fujian province.

The Govt did run sporadic open days for a while - starting in April 2011 - with a limited number of tickets, none of which I managed to make it to, sadly, and in a somewhat ironic twist they asked Stephen Yow to lend them some of his furniture to furnish the house with for the open days. However, as of early 2014, the open days have now come to a close and the Govt has undertaken a bidding process for the building's adaptive reuse. Unfortunately, one of the main limitations of the property is that despite its 17,000 sq ft size, most of the space is divided into rooms too small to be of any great use, limiting the potential for its future utilisation. I guess we will just have to wait and see what happens.


There used to be a tennis court here until 1966

Anyway, the building has quite a history and we can read some of it courtesy of the recent(ish) heritage assessment carried out by the Antiquities and Monuments Office a few years ago. Here is the link: http://www.legco.gov.hk/yr07-08/english/subleg/brief/175_brf.pdf, but I have cut/pasted the most interesting bits below:

The residence at the site was built in 1937 by Mrs. Shum Li Po-lun (????), the granddaughter of the renowned Chinese merchant and social leader Mr. Li Sing (??) in the 19th Century. Her father, Mr. Li Po-chun (???), was also a notable merchant and social leader in Hong Kong who made great contributions to many social welfare causes. Mrs. Shum sold the house to the Yow family in 1977. The Yow family is a successful merchant clan represented by Mr. Yow Qhei-man (???) who ran dried fruit business in Hong Kong. His son, Mr. Yow Mok-shing (???), is also a famous businessman who was appointed as Chairman of Tung Wah Hospital in 1979.
The site was sold at HK$24,000,000 in 1977, and the Yow family named the house �Ultamia� (???, King Yin Lei), literally �House of Virtuous View�. The name is inscribed on the Pai-lau (??) at the entrance to the site.
Now, of course I mentioned the house's brief but rather spectacular appearance in Enter the Dragon in the beginning of this post, but since I first wrote about this place back in 2006 (on version 1 of this blog, this is version 3) I have also seen it used in Clark Gable's Soldier of Fortune (filmed in 1955) and also the Robert Culp/Bill Cosby vehicle, I Spy (filmed in 1965).