MUST-SNAP LOCATIONS IN HK TESTING LOCALS’ PATIENCE
Tourists are pushing locals out of their spaces to line up the perfect shot
FOR smartphone-wielding hordes of tourists, Hong Kong boasts a host of must-have Instagram locations, but crowds of snap-happy travellers are testing local patience and transforming once quaint pockets of the bustling metropolis.
Tony Hui recalls how elderly residents always used to play cards in a courtyard in the middle of the densely packed housing block, where he owns a dry cleaning store.
The buildings in Quarry Bay here are one of the city’s best known residential complexes, famed for tightly-knit apartments towering above three sides of a thin courtyard.
But in recent years, daily throngs of tourists have relegated the card players to a dark corner of the courtyard.
“You might say the elderly have made way for the photo takers’ convenience, to not get in their way,” Hui concedes.
While the building had long been a draw for street photographers and architecture enthusiasts, social media has helped turn it into a mass tourist attraction, fuelled by it featuring as a location in a recent Transformers blockbuster and the remake of the Japanese manga classic Ghost in the Shell. photos and disturbing residents has done little to deter the chic travellers, who usually form an orderly line to wait for a coveted spot in the middle of symmetrical blocks.
Hong Kong’s unique urban aesthetics, especially its public housing estates, have proved enormously popular to social media obsessives.
Critics say the crowds help romanticise poverty sharing images that provide only a shallow view of what it is to live in one of the world’s most unaffordable property markets.
Across the harbour, tourists and some locals have taken over the basketball courts surrounded by the now iconic rainbowcoloured housing estate in the Choi Hung district, which means rainbow in Cantonese.
It is where Korean boy band Seventeen shot a music video and is now being promoted by the government’s tourism bureau.
Local resident Chow Keung, a 72-year-old kung fu master, is fairly sanguine about the visitors as he watches them from a bench.
“Many people have asked me how to get here and I give them directions, I don’t mind... but I’ve had to ask some tourists not to leave their trash behind.”
A grandfather surnamed Liu recalls a bygone era when children actually rode scooters and freely played basketball on the courts. Today’s teens have to navigate the groups of photographers as they play.
One 14-year-old resident, who gave his name as Yik, says he now fears racking up a bill when he shoots hoops.
He adds: “I once accidentally hit someone’s phone.”