The National - News

THE INVESTORS SQUEEZED BY TINY HOMES

▶ ‘Nano-flats’ or co-shares can be the only option for profession­als buying in dense Hong Kong city

- Agence France-Presse

As housing prices spiral in Hong Kong, young profession­als are living in ever-shrinking spaces, with box-like “nano-flats” and co-shares touted as fashionabl­e solutions.

Blocks of sleek miniature apartments packed with mod-cons are springing up around the densely packed city, pitched as an attractive and more affordable lifestyle choice, but still at an eye-watering cost.

Finance worker Adrian Law, 25, paid more than HK$6 million ($765,000) two years ago for his tiny studio apartment in a new developmen­t in the gentrified Sai Ying Pun neighbourh­ood.

The slim glass building squeezes four apartments onto each floor and includes “nano-flats”, a new term for homes of under 215 square feet.

Mr Law’s studio is a fraction bigger at 292 sq ft, with a price per square foot of nearly HK$20,000.

He has adapted to the limited space by buying transforma­ble furniture – his bed folds away against the wall to reveal a desk tucked underneath - and he keeps most of his belongings at his parents’ home.

But with a fingerprin­t-activated door lock, washing machine, TV, fridge and even curtains, Mr Law says the flat came with everything he needed.

“Property developers are marketing the concept to buyers that they only need a place to sleep and can do anything else outside,” he says, admitting he eats mostly take-away food as the kitchen is too small for cooking.

Mr Law’s parents helped him put down a 30 per cent deposit

when he bought the apartment and he sees it as an investment. He pays HK$24,000 per month for the mortgage, around 40 per cent of his salary.

“One can only get into a winning position by owning a place,” he said. “If you’re renting, you are spending all your money without gaining anything at the end.”

Hong Kong’s real estate is the most expensive in the world, with median house prices at 19.4 times median incomes – the worst ratio globally according to the Annual Demographi­a Internatio­nal Housing Affordabil­ity Survey 2018.

Property prices have been fuelled by an influx of money from wealthy mainland Chinese investors and developers, and the city government stands accused of failing to control the red-hot property market.

More than 60 per cent of new flats under 430 sq ft are taken up by investment buyers, according to government figures.

With the ability to buy a flat increasing­ly out of reach for the majority of Hong Kong’s 7.4 million residents, developers are creating smaller spaces to reach a wider market. Under Hong Kong law there is no limit to how small a flat can be.

Ryan Ip, senior researcher at public policy think tank Our Hong Kong Foundation, describes it as an “unhealthy” trend with developers putting profit above quality of life.

“If you count the per-squarefoot price for smaller-size flats, it is even higher than larger flats,” says Mr Ip, who believes mental and physical health will suffer if properties continue to shrink.

Rental prices have also rocketed and the wait for government-subsidised public housing can be five years.

Mr Ip says expanding land supply by any means, including reclamatio­n from the sea, is the only way to solve the affordable housing shortage.

But other local land research groups argue Hong Kong should develop under-utilised brownfield sites and idle government land first.

The government is considerin­g a host of options, from new artificial islands to developing the city’s cherished country parks.

Designers are also putting forward their own new concepts, including converting concrete pipes into living spaces and transformi­ng shipping containers into homes.

Many poorer Hong Kong residents resort to renting dingy “subdivided” flats – apartments carved up into multiple living spaces. But even for those on a good salary, a decent home is often unaffordab­le.

Jezz Ng, 29, earns a monthly wage of HK$32,000 as a teacher and has chosen to live in a new co-share housing set-up, rather than shelling out for her own rent. At weekends she goes home to her parents.

Ms Ng shares a unit with seven other women where she has her own small room, which can fit a single bed and a desk.

For now it is an ideal solution, says Ms Ng.

“I want to strive for an apartment, but at the moment, there’s no way for me to achieve that goal,” she says.

If you’re renting, you’re spending all your money without gaining anything at the end ADRIAN LAW Finance official

 ??  ?? Jezz Ng, a 29-yearold teacher, chooses to live in a new co-share housing setup, rather than renting
Jezz Ng, a 29-yearold teacher, chooses to live in a new co-share housing setup, rather than renting
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