Hong Kong Public Housing
An Architectural and Policy History
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:25th Nov '24
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Hong Kong Public Housing provides the first comprehensive history of one of the most dramatic episodes in the global history of the modern built environment: the vast public housing programme sponsored by successive Hong Kong governments from the 1950s, in a quest to build up the territory into a lasting ‘people’s home’. And unlike many of its counterparts elsewhere, this is a programme still ongoing today – a case of ‘history in progress’ – as Hong Kong now boasts one of the world’s longest-lasting public housing programmes. During that time, it has been not just a mirror of the cultural and economic values of Hong Kong society but also a reflection of more nebulous, fast-changing perceptions of identity – and a testament to the community-building achievements of Hongkongers over these years.
This authoritative study combines architectural history with the broader social, political, and cultural aspects of housing production – particularly the geo-political issues of sovereignty and decolonisation that uniquely, and fundamentally, structured the trajectory of Hong Kong public housing and territory development. Exploring the relationship between built form, ideology, and administrative governance, it shows how massive state intervention interacted at times uneasily with Hong Kong’s dominant laissez-faire ethos, to help maintain the legitimacy of successive administrations during an era of ‘auto-decolonisation’, and support an interstitial society suspended between two sovereignties. Following more recent political changes, Hong Kong’s public housing heritage has also become a focus of nostalgic community pride – a monumental achievement of ‘home building’ which this book documents and celebrates for posterity.
“Hong Kong Public Housing offers a bold and novel contribution by adopting a bi-modal lens, planning policy and architecture, to reinterpret the city’s public housing history… Glendinning’s fine-grained analyses, which deconstruct myths portraying Hong Kong’s public housing story as a ‘miracle’ simply born from the devastating 1953 Shek Kip Mei fire or as an adjunct to the city’s industrialization and rise as an Asian Tiger, make the book a compelling a read… Glendinning’s balanced critique of both colonial and post-handover housing policies stands out as exemplary.”
Luk, Y. X. C. (2025). Hong Kong Public Housing: An Architectural and Policy History: by Miles Glendinning, Oxfordshire and New York, Routledge, 2024, 517 pp., £94.50 (e-book), £105.00 (hardback). Planning Perspectives, 40(5), 1416–1418. https://doi.org/10.1080/02665433.2025.2548077
ISBN: 9781138680227
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 1150g
518 pages