Cathay

HONG KONGISH

ED PETERS explores The Mills, a new heritage project that merges the Hong Kong textile industry’s past and future

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TSE CHI- KIN is pacing meditative­ly through The Mills, a former textiles factory in Tsuen Wan.

‘ There used to be scores of spinning machines on each floor, running day and night. You couldn’t hear yourself think,’ says the 83-year- old retired technician, who worked for Nan Fung Textiles in the 1970s when it was producing up to 32 million pounds of yarn a year.

‘ Tsuen Wan was all thundering, clattering factories then, no fancy malls or apartments or MTR. I got the job at Nan Fung through a friend, starting on HK$3,000 a month and working eighthour shifts, six days a week. No lunch hour, mind you: you ate on the job,’ says Tse.

Today’s occupants of The Mills also eat on the job. Only now it’s likely to be a soy latte and vegan wrap taken al desko. The spaces once known as Mills 4, 5 and 6 have been recast into a very 2018 triumvirat­e: heritage centre, business space and shopping precinct – the latest in a succession of revamped Hong Kong heritage victories after both PMQ and Tai Kwun in Central dodged the wrecking ball.

Nan Fung is a classic Hong Kong success story, first making its name as a yarn manufactur­er before diversifyi­ng into property and shipping. In 2013, managing director Vanessa Cheung, granddaugh­ter of founder Chen Din-hwa, decided that the company’s defunct mills deserved a future.

Five years and HK$700 million later, new bridges have linked two of the original buildings, there are public parks (with thriving herb and vegetable beds) covering the roofs, and glass has taken the place of an entire concrete wall. But Tse’s stroll down memory lane is still signposted by pieces of history: the old factory gates have been incorporat­ed as decoration, battered fire buckets act as signage, and concrete columns have been deliberate­ly left as stark and unadorned as they were in the days when the city was a manufactur­ing powerhouse.

The Mills is starting to hum with activity once again, with plenty of nods to its industrial past. One of the new tenants is Fabrica, an incubator for start-ups crosspolli­nating fashion, textiles and technology. Even before The Mills fully opens this month, Hong Kong’s first consumeror­ientated upcycling operation – named Alt – has been turning out new garments woven from old clothes. The process – cleaning, disassembl­ing and rejuvenati­ng – can take as little as four hours: an object lesson to a throwaway society.

Chat, or the Centre for Heritage, Arts and Textile, will run programmes and exhibition­s, as well as hosting a fully operationa­l yarn-spinning machine. An early project saw Chat staff demonstrat­ing weaving techniques in Tsuen Wan’s public housing estates.

Cafes and restaurant­s also spread from street level to the top floor, where they look onto the larger of two gardens. There are shops selling home accessorie­s and alternativ­e fashion items. There’s even a 24-hour vet and something the younger Tse would have had real difficulty picturing – a pet hotel.

But as much as anything else, The

Mills is testament to a formative period of the city’s history. In 1966, the garment industry employed 246,470 people of the registered 3.7 million population – the largest number of any sector, before rising costs saw manufactur­ing shift to other parts of Asia, and the city itself moved towards other industries. The building that ex-technician Tse recalls so vividly helped form the bedrock of Hong Kong’s prosperity today, and is now set to play a role in its future. As he says: ‘I’m old now, but it’s heartening to see my workplace take on a new lease of life. There’s something for everyone here, especially the next generation.’ themills.com. hk

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 ??  ?? A stitch in time The 1954-built Nan Fung Textiles mills (top and bottom far left) have been reborn as a hub for creative enterprise­s 一脈相承 於1954年落成的南­豐紗廠(最左上及最左下圖現) 已活化成為匯聚多個創­業意企 的中心
A stitch in time The 1954-built Nan Fung Textiles mills (top and bottom far left) have been reborn as a hub for creative enterprise­s 一脈相承 於1954年落成的南­豐紗廠(最左上及最左下圖現) 已活化成為匯聚多個創­業意企 的中心
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