Ma Tau Wai Road (Chinese: 馬頭圍道) is a main road in Kowloon City District, Kowloon, Hong Kong.

Ma Tau Wai Road
Traditional Chinese馬頭圍道
Simplified Chinese马头围道
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinMǎ​tóu Wéi Dào
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpingmaa5 tau4 wai4 dou6
Ma Tau Wai Road in To Kwa Wan
Pak Tai Temple along Ma Tau Wai Road.

History

edit

Named after Ma Tau Wai, Ma Tau Wai Road was the southern section of the original Kowloon City Road.[citation needed] The northern section was named after Ma Tau Chung as Ma Tau Chung Road.[1] There is a new Kowloon City Road that connects to Kai Tak Tunnel (formerly known as Airport Tunnel).

Features

edit

A Pak Tai Temple is located along Ma Tau Wai Road. Pak Tai temples are dedicated to Pak Tai (北帝 "North Deity" in Cantonese). This one was built in 1929 and is managed by the Chinese Temples Committee.[2]

The two stretches of Ma Tai Wai Road, formerly interconnected, were separated on 17 October 1965 with the northern stretch connected to Chatham Road North, and the southern stretch to To Kwa Wan Road.

Collapse of building at 45 Ma Tau Wai Road (2010)

edit
 
Collapse site

On 29 January 2010, Block J of 45 Ma Tau Wai Road, a rundown five-storey residential building, collapsed with little warning, resulting in the deaths of four people. The event took place at around 1:30pm. Renovation work was being carried out on the commercial unit located on the ground floor of the building, when construction workers noticed signs of an imminent collapse and rushed out to raise the alarm. It is speculated that the unauthorised renovation was the primary factor that led to the collapse of an already decaying and structurally weak building. Some of the residents were alerted by the commotion and evacuated seconds before the entire building caved in. A squad of fireman arrived at the scene just as the disaster unfolded, having received an emergency call from a passer-by prior to the collapse. Several hundred emergency workers were deployed in the ensuing rescue operation, which had to take place under adjacent buildings that were themselves subject to collapse at any moment. Temporary reinforcements were erected to support and stabilise the remaining structures to give added protection to the rescue teams.[3]

The Chief Executive Donald Tsang later visited the site to inspect the rubble.[4]

A repair order had been issued by the authorities months before, but at the time of the inspection, the extent of the symptoms did not indicate the gravity of the situation. The walk-up building, which was 55 years old, was the last block in a group of ten identical buildings. Each floor housed four apartments of around 150 square feet (14 square metres), which in some cases were further partitioned by their owners. Residents in the adjoining blocks were subsequently relocated to temporary shelters in the immediate aftermath and then on to interim housing at public estates. This type of building is typical of many over the territory.[5]

Implications and further action

edit

The case was the first of its type in several decades, and raised new awareness amongst the public of the potential dangers faced by residents of such buildings. A thorough investigation into this particular incident, as well as a plan to prevent similar cases from occurring was ordered by the Government. The approximately four thousand buildings of the same classification that were constructed before 1960 were subsequently earmarked for inspection within one month.[6][7]

The Urban Renewal Authority later announced redevelopment together with other blocks in the row.[8] The project was later named “eResidence [zh]” (煥然懿居) and was finished in May 2020.

References

edit
  1. ^ 蕭險峰; 岑智明; 劉國偉 (15 April 2016). 九龍城「上帝古廟」原址考證 (PDF). Fieldwork and Documents: South China Research Resource Station Newsletter (in Chinese (Hong Kong)) (83): 13. ISSN 1990-9020.
  2. ^ Antiquities Advisory Board. Historic Building Appraisal. Pak Tai Temple, No. 146 Ma Tau Wai Road, Hung Hom
  3. ^ "香港最慘烈塌樓". Oriental Daily News. 30 January 2010. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  4. ^ "Inquiry launched into fatal building collapse". Hong Kong Government. 30 January 2010. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  5. ^ Austin Chiu (1 February 2010). "Rituals on the street and the Net as 17 families remain homeless". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  6. ^ Govt press release re. investigation report on the collapse, 26 April 2010
  7. ^ Fatal collapse due to `external forces' Archived 2012-10-15 at the Wayback Machine, The Standard, April 27, 2010
  8. ^ "URA commences the Ma Tau Wai Road/Chun Tin Street project with special measures". Urban Renewal Authority. 24 Feb 2010.
edit