The protests in Hong Kong are occupying world headlines recently.It is not only the problems happening in the center of urban Hong Kong that make the government anxious. Miles away from the modern skyscrapers, in the rural areas of Hong Kong, the so-called small house policy also weighs heavily on the government.
The small house policy allows an indigenous male villager who is 18 years old and is descended through the male line from a resident in 1898 of a recognized village in the New Territories an entitlement to one concessionary grant during his lifetime to build one small house.
The small house policy arose during the colonial period in Hong Kong. As a peninsula that constitutes one of the three main regions of Hong Kong, New Territories were leased from the Qing Dynasty to the United Kingdom government in 1898 for 99 years in the Second Convention of Peking. The crucial point in this transaction is that it was a “lease.” Unlike Hong Kong Island and the Kowloon Peninsula, which were ceded to Britain in perpetuity, the ownership of the New Territories belonged to their residents.
At that time, Hong Kong Island and Kowloon were not as densely populated, but there were already about 400 villages in the New Territories with more than 100,000 inhabitants. The small house policy was introduced in 1972. The objective was to calm down the resistance of inhabitants and improve the then prevailing low standard of housing in the rural areas of the New Territories .This photo shows how traditional village houses look.
The small house policy still existed after the United Kingdom returned Hong Kong to China in 1997. Article 40 of the Basic Law said that the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government shall protect the lawful traditional rights and interests of the indigenous inhabitants of the New Territories.
According to the small house policy, each house could be built to a maximum of three stories and a footprint of not more than 700 square feet. Imagine that in Hong Kong, where per capita living space is less than 150 square feet_that is not small at all! There are more than 240,000 indigenous males in New Territories and the number is increasing. Obviously, limited land resources will never meet the application for all these people.
Although a large number of indigenous males who had moved and were living overseas for many years, they returned to their home villages in New Territories to apply for the small house rights. If their application were approved, they built houses and then sold them for money. If the houses were sold within 5 years of completion, the villager or the developer must pay the government a premium, which is still probably a good deal consider the housing prices in Hong Kong. But more often, the right holders sold their rights to developers even before the houses were completed. Many New Territories village chiefs take the lead in cooperation with the developers, collect the small rights in the village and sell the rights to a developer who would then build mansions for sale. This photo below shows the new modern villa built in the rural area in New Territories. They are really popular because of the natural surroundings and fresh air.
The actions of the small house right holders have upset many citizens in Hong Kong because it is unfair treatment that grants land rights to indigenous males but not to every citizen of Hong Kong. As a result,the government has been reviewing the New Territories small house policy for a long time. Many personal applications are shelved, but it has yet to decide on the final outcome of this tedious exercise.
4 comments:
This is very interesting. When I read your post, I immediately saw some parallels with the Native American reservations that we have in the United States. What I find interesting is that in Hong Kong, only males of the indigenous population are entitled to this small house. In contrast, in the U.S., I don't think the government provides a house to each member of an indigenous Native American tribe, but rather contractually grants limited sovereignty to tribal reservations so that they can generally be independent from local governments.
When I first read the title of this post, I immediately thought of a documentary I recently watched titled TINY: A Story About Living Small. This film follows a young man with no previous construction knowledge as he attempts to build a tiny house from scratch. I had never heard of tiny houses before, but I learned more about the tiny house movement through the film. Tiny houses are houses that are under 1000 square feet, but most are much smaller than that. Many tiny houses are under 500 square feet, some as small as 80 square feet! One of the ideas behind the tiny house movement is to save space, energy, etc. While I think the idea behind the small house policy in Hong Kong is great and indigenous villagers should receive help to meet their housing needs, you make a great point - how sustainable is the small house scheme? To make this more sustainable, it may be wise to consider reducing the size of the houses. As the documentary I mentioned points out, it is very feasible to live in a tiny house under 400 square feet while still having all of one’s needs met.
Very interesting article, do you happen to have resources related to this? I actually hold these rights, but I started selling them a few years ago, and need to visit HK once more to finalize it. Do you know any way that I can obtain my rights back?
Yes you have as many sons as you can! Don't see any other way to get your rights back....you sold them for a financial amount dipshit.
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