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Whampoa Garden

Private housing estate in Hung Hom, Kowloon, Hong Kong

Whampoa Garden

Private housing estate in Hung Hom, Kowloon, Hong Kong

FieldValue
urban_development_nameWhampoa Garden
image[[Image:Whampoa Garden 2017.jpg250px]]
image_width250px
captionWhampoa Garden in June 2017
locationHung Hom
groundbreaking
constructed
developerHutchison Whampoa Property Limited (HWP)
managerHutchison Whampoa Limited
buildings88 buildings in 12 complexes

Whampoa Garden () is the largest private housing estate in Hung Hom, Kowloon, Hong Kong. It was built on the site of the former Whampoa Dockyards by Hutchison Whampoa Property. The urban design of the estate incorporates concepts inspired by the Garden city movement and was completed in 1991.

Features

The estate covers 19 hectares and consists of 12 complexes. Ten are residential/commercial mixed use, with a total of 88 residential high-rise towers (16-storey). The other two are solely commercial use. There was a height restriction on the buildings due to its proximity to the Kai Tak Airport at the time. It includes eight shopping arcades, three supermarkets, a cinema, hundreds of restaurants and shops, a karaoke, five primary schools, mini-parks and two public transport interchange.

There are 10,431 flats, ranging from 351 to, in the 88 residential towers.

''The Whampoa'', a long boat-shaped shopping centre in September 2005

Notable commercial outlets include the first ParknShop Hong Kong Superstore, which was opened in 1996 in Whampoa Garden Phase 12 with a floor space of 4200 m2. Other notable shops include Sushiro, AEON (Japanese department store), Sukiya, Wonderland Superstore.

The Whampoa, a 110 m-long boat-shaped shopping centre built in the original No. 1 Dry Dock, is located in Phase 6. During the 1980s and 1990s, the structure housed a playground on the top and "deck" level, seafood restaurants, a cinema on other floors above ground levels; the department store Yaohan on ground and basement level, and an indoor family theme park (, 開心一號) with an arcade game centre and a roller skating rink on lower basement level. In late 1990s, the department store was taken over by JUSCO department store. The JUSCO department store was renamed to AEON in 2013, to be consistent with the name change adopted by its parent company in Japan. In May 2016, the department store was renovated and renamed as AEON Style after its reopening in September the same year.

There is also a promenade along sea side, from Laguna Verde to Hung Hom Ferry Pier. It is also linked to the Avenue of Stars. One can walk from Hung Hom Pier to Tsim Sha Tsui Pier in about 40 minutes.

Complexes

Map of Whampoa Garden
PhaseNameNo. blocksNo. floorsNo. unitsYear built
1Juniper Mansions5156001985
2Cherry Mansions18152,1601987
3Willow Mansions8159591987
4Palm Mansions6157201987
5Oak Mansions9151,0801988
7Cotton Tree Mansions5154651988
9Lily Mansions10161,2181989
10Banyan Mansions5156001988
11Bauhinia Mansions13151,5601989
12Bamboo Mansions9151,0791991

Demographic

According to the 2016 by-census, Whampoa Gardens had a population of 30,198. The median age was 41.8. Nearly 88 per cent of the estate was of Chinese ethnicity. Cantonese speakers comprised 87 per cent of the speaking population, with English as the second-most usual spoken language, at 7 per cent.

Transportation

;MTR Whampoa Garden is served by Whampoa station, the terminus of the Kwun Tong line. The underground station, located beneath Tak On Street, opened on 23 October 2016. The station is adjacent to the Whampoa Garden Bus Terminus. It is also a short walk away from the Hung Hom Ferry Pier.

;Ferry ;* Hung Hom to North Point ;* Hung Hom to Central

Education

Whampoa Garden and Whampoa Estate are in Primary One Admission (POA) School Net 35. Within the school net are multiple aided schools (operated independently but funded with government money) and Ma Tau Chung Government Primary School (Hung Hom Bay) (馬頭涌官立小學(紅磡灣)).

References

References

  1. "Hutchison Whampoa Limited: Property Development".
  2. Chan, Chi-kau, Johnnie Casire, [http://hub.hku.hk/bitstream/10722/29067/1/FullText.pdf "Community development and management of private sector housing estates in Hong Kong"], [[University of Hong Kong]], August 1995
  3. [http://cinematreasures.org/theaters/29169 "GH Whampoa Cinema", cinematreasures.org]
  4. Golden Harvest]] website
  5. [http://www.tco.gov.hk/textonly/english/legislation/indoor_pti.html List of Indoor Public Transport Interchanges and Bus Termini]
  6. "PARKnSHOP milestones".
  7. [http://www.discoverhongkong.com/eng/shopping/location-kowloon.html Hong Kong Tourism Board: Where to shop > Kowloon]
  8. [http://www.whampoaworld.com/shopfinder_index.asp Wonderful Worlds of Whampoa commercial centres website: Shop finder]
  9. "Major Housing Estates". Census and Statistics Department.
  10. "POA2023 Primary School Lists by School Net for Discretionary Places Admission Stage". [[Education Bureau]].
  11. "POA School Net 35". [[Education Bureau]].
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