Jump to content

Woh Chai Shan

Coordinates: 22°19′48″N 114°10′08″E / 22.329892°N 114.168794°E / 22.329892; 114.168794
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 219.77.116.215 (talk) at 20:33, 1 January 2021. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

View of Woh Chai Shan in 2015.
Open space at the top of the hill and above the service reservoir, in 2016.
View from an open space near the top of Woh Chai Shan, looking North.

Woh Chai Shan (Chinese: 窩仔山) aka. Shek Kip Mei Hill (石硤尾山) aka. Bishop Hill (主教山) is a hill in Shek Kip Mei, New Kowloon, Hong Kong. It is approximately 86-metre-tall.

The hill is zoned as open space under Hong Kong's town planning system. It is mostly undeveloped and is used by some local residents for recreation and leisure. The Kwun Tong Line of the Mass Transit Railway (MTR) runs beneath the hill.

Service reservoir

The top of the hill is the site of a former service reservoir of the Water Supplies Department, officially known as the Sham Shui Po Fresh Water Break Pressure Tank, that was disused due to structural issues.[1] Demolition of the covered (underground) reservoir began in December 2020, but was halted after the works revealed well-preserved Roman-style arches dating to 1904.[2] The Antiquities and Monuments Office was summoned to assess the site.[1][3] Heritage groups, district councillors, and members of the public have called for the structure's preservation. Comparisons have been made to Paddington Reservoir Gardens, in Sydney, a successful conversion of a similar historic reservoir to a public garden.[4]

On 29 December 2020, the government announced that the reservoir would be preserved. Heritage commissioner Ivanhoe Chang apologised for the incident and pledged to "make sure that this will not happen again". Sham Shui Po district councillor Kalvin Ho blamed the Water Supplies Department for furnishing misleading and "very dark" photos to the council prior to the demolition.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Demolition put to stop as 100-year-old structure discovered in Shek Kip Mei reservoir". The Standard. 28 December 2020.
  2. ^ Head of Hong Kong heritage office sorry for ‘insensitivity’ over plan to demolish striking century-old site, but unanswered questions fuel backlash, SCMP, 29 Dec 2020
  3. ^ "Councillor demands answers over historic reservoir". RTHK. 29 December 2020.
  4. ^ 'Turn Bishop Hill ruins into a public park', RTHK, 30 Dec 2020
  5. ^ "Govt to preserve historic underground reservoir". RTHK. 29 December 2020.

22°19′48″N 114°10′08″E / 22.329892°N 114.168794°E / 22.329892; 114.168794