The Death and Life of Hong Kong’s Illegal Façades

Due to a combination of removal campaigns and comprehensive urban interventions over the years, the streetscape of Hong Kong has been cleared of most of its illegal façade structures, including its iconic street signs and neon billboards. As a consequence, the semiotic richness and immaterial herita...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Francisco García Moro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2020-07-01
Series:ARENA Journal of Architectural Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ajar.arena-architecture.eu/articles/231
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spelling doaj-3d21f06f8b3948a3832ace70c9f845882020-11-25T03:04:02ZengUbiquity PressARENA Journal of Architectural Research2397-08202020-07-015110.5334/ajar.23119The Death and Life of Hong Kong’s Illegal FaçadesFrancisco García Moro0Universitat Politècnica de ValènciaDue to a combination of removal campaigns and comprehensive urban interventions over the years, the streetscape of Hong Kong has been cleared of most of its illegal façade structures, including its iconic street signs and neon billboards. As a consequence, the semiotic richness and immaterial heritage value that once reflected the dynamics of local businesses, collective memories and popular crafts has disappeared from what is now an increasingly sanitised urban landscape. Titled in reference to Jane Jacobs’ landmark work, 'The Death and Life of Great American Cities' (1961), this essay studies the rise, persecution and contemporary reappraisal of Hong Kong’s illegal façades within the city’s historical and legal context – with a special focus on the activism of the not-for-profit neon preservation group called Street Sign HK.https://ajar.arena-architecture.eu/articles/231hong kongstreet signsillegal constructioninformalitycultural heritageneon lightingvisual imagery
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Francisco García Moro
spellingShingle Francisco García Moro
The Death and Life of Hong Kong’s Illegal Façades
ARENA Journal of Architectural Research
hong kong
street signs
illegal construction
informality
cultural heritage
neon lighting
visual imagery
author_facet Francisco García Moro
author_sort Francisco García Moro
title The Death and Life of Hong Kong’s Illegal Façades
title_short The Death and Life of Hong Kong’s Illegal Façades
title_full The Death and Life of Hong Kong’s Illegal Façades
title_fullStr The Death and Life of Hong Kong’s Illegal Façades
title_full_unstemmed The Death and Life of Hong Kong’s Illegal Façades
title_sort death and life of hong kong’s illegal façades
publisher Ubiquity Press
series ARENA Journal of Architectural Research
issn 2397-0820
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Due to a combination of removal campaigns and comprehensive urban interventions over the years, the streetscape of Hong Kong has been cleared of most of its illegal façade structures, including its iconic street signs and neon billboards. As a consequence, the semiotic richness and immaterial heritage value that once reflected the dynamics of local businesses, collective memories and popular crafts has disappeared from what is now an increasingly sanitised urban landscape. Titled in reference to Jane Jacobs’ landmark work, 'The Death and Life of Great American Cities' (1961), this essay studies the rise, persecution and contemporary reappraisal of Hong Kong’s illegal façades within the city’s historical and legal context – with a special focus on the activism of the not-for-profit neon preservation group called Street Sign HK.
topic hong kong
street signs
illegal construction
informality
cultural heritage
neon lighting
visual imagery
url https://ajar.arena-architecture.eu/articles/231
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