Open space the Hong Kong way
THE NATURAL VIEWPOINT
At 400-square-miles, the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
(SAR, not SARS!) is almost exactly half the size of Orange County’s
800 square miles, but with almost 7-million inhabitants, compared
with our fewer than 3 million.
The Hong Kong government’s plan preserves 40% of the land as open
space and parks. How does Orange County compare? The county Web site
states we have just under 200,000 acres of built land (residential,
commercial, industrial) and 100,000 acres of open space. So we have
33% open space now -- but some of it will be developed in the future.
How can Hong Kong do it? In the 1970s the British created seven
“new towns” to house a burgeoning population of refugees pouring
across the border from China after WWII and increasing in the 1960s
during Mao Tse Tung’s “cultural revolution.”
Their neat and efficient architectural plan was high density
residential structures with plenty of open space around them. The
typical Hong Kong housing development is a small cluster of 30-story
high-rise apartment towers built atop a two-story shopping mall. The
mall roof may hold a green park, swimming pool, exercise course and
playground.
The result is that the towns are an incongruous (to us)
juxtaposition of steep green hillsides with ranks of giant high-rise
buildings spiking up from the flatlands.
The hillsides are truly another world. On walks to two separate
peaks, we encountered lush tropical forest similar to Hawaii’s (same
latitude), alive with water seeps, singing birds and butterflies. The
forests were free of city noise, and well-attended by locals enjoying
the serenity. Think Heisler Park with tropical forest instead of
grass, and much larger: jogging paths, exercise courses, tot lots
with brightly colored play structures and extensive steep, wild
hillsides.
I couldn’t help comparing it to the Orange County pattern: ridges
shaved, hillsides scraped, and the natural vegetation replaced by an
endless blanket of single-family residences and nonnative
landscaping. What would Orange County look like with 7-million
residents in half the space?
In Hong Kong urban parks and walking paths line the river; old men
walk their birds (in cages) and play Go. Gardeners tend the flowers
and shrubs with bamboo rakes and hand tools. No leaf blowers here;
China is not short of labor.
High-density housing in the U.S. is resisted in part because the
neighbors don’t trust that the open space unused for housing will
actually be preserved. In Hong Kong, both high rise and open space
were created by the same plan.
Another problem with high-density development here is traffic
congestion caused by the residents moving between home and work. In
our short time in Hong Kong we observed two methods of dealing with
congestion not common in Orange County. The residents overwhelmingly
use public transportation: commuter trains, subways, trams and the
double-decker buses that constantly patrol the streets. Also,
pedestrian street crossings are limited. In town, traffic is often
unimpeded by pedestrians for blocks. People cross in underground
passages, or overhead walkways that originate and end directly in
malls, hotels and other buildings. And, of course, instead of relying
only on stop lights and intersections that cause traffic backups, the
British constructed roundabouts.
Surprisingly, Hong Kong was missing that mainstay of alternative
transportation, the commuter bicycle. We saw bicycles mostly used for
recreation on scenic paths along the river.
I don’t know what it’s like to live in one of those high-rise
apartments, but the trade-offs are clear: extensive flower-filled
urban open spaces and trails, and great views of steep, lush green
hillsides.
* ELISABETH M. BROWN is a biologist and the president of Laguna
Greenbelt Inc.
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