lafuguedantoine:

theastralcity:

Inspired by another post here on Tumblr, I decided to look into the Kowloon Walled City in Hong Kong a bit more, it truly was one of the most amazing and terrifying places on earth.  Being slightly smaller than an NFL stadium, the structure was built of 350 smaller interconnected buildings and hosted, at it’s peak, a population density of 5 million people per square mile.

To put those numbers in perspective, this would be like taking the entire population of metro Philadelphia, the 4th largest in the US, and putting it in 1 square mile instead of 1,744.

The area was also largely ungoverned and unregulated.  Factories, apartments, schools, temples, churches, shops, cafes, hotels and almost anything else one could imagine were housed within the structure that never had a full blueprint of it done. Buildings were built onto buildings, expanded, rebuilt, and re-purposed as needed without a central authority of any kind.

Within the structure, natural light was almost non-existent, and an unknown number of miles of jury-rigged wires provided electricity to everything.  Water constantly dripped down to the lower levels from both rain and leaking pipes, while garbage filled every passage.  A constant yellow haze filled the structure and there were never any government safety inspections.

The Kowloon Walled City was demolished in the early 1990s as part of the deal that returned Hong Kong to the Chinese from the British. The entire area is now a park.

I find places like this fascinating, it is just incredible what we, humans, build and live in. This, hive, for lack of a better term, was one of the most interesting structures I’ve yet looked at.

For a documentary shot inside of the Kowloon Walled City, check here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lby9P3ms11w

Incredible!

(via rickkanelives)

lafuguedantoine:

theastralcity:

Inspired by another post here on Tumblr, I decided to look into the Kowloon Walled City in Hong Kong a bit more, it truly was one of the most amazing and terrifying places on earth.  Being slightly smaller than an NFL stadium, the structure was built of 350 smaller interconnected buildings and hosted, at it’s peak, a population density of 5 million people per square mile.

To put those numbers in perspective, this would be like taking the entire population of metro Philadelphia, the 4th largest in the US, and putting it in 1 square mile instead of 1,744.

The area was also largely ungoverned and unregulated.  Factories, apartments, schools, temples, churches, shops, cafes, hotels and almost anything else one could imagine were housed within the structure that never had a full blueprint of it done. Buildings were built onto buildings, expanded, rebuilt, and re-purposed as needed without a central authority of any kind.

Within the structure, natural light was almost non-existent, and an unknown number of miles of jury-rigged wires provided electricity to everything.  Water constantly dripped down to the lower levels from both rain and leaking pipes, while garbage filled every passage.  A constant yellow haze filled the structure and there were never any government safety inspections.

The Kowloon Walled City was demolished in the early 1990s as part of the deal that returned Hong Kong to the Chinese from the British. The entire area is now a park.

I find places like this fascinating, it is just incredible what we, humans, build and live in. This, hive, for lack of a better term, was one of the most interesting structures I’ve yet looked at.

For a documentary shot inside of the Kowloon Walled City, check here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lby9P3ms11w

Incredible!

(via rickkanelives)

Posted 1 month ago & Filed under places, 16,708 notes

Notes:

  1. swissedgear reblogged this from velodrone and added:
    This is the jungle! theastralcity:
  2. mindsinadreamworld reblogged this from kurtdiesal
  3. johnnymama reblogged this from fuji-tum
  4. fuji-tum reblogged this from hughughug
  5. killcow reblogged this from paranoiahime
  6. kurtdiesal reblogged this from leadanationwithamicrophone
  7. nolemonpledge reblogged this from leadanationwithamicrophone
  8. leadanationwithamicrophone reblogged this from yaoiguai
  9. lobonegro reblogged this from logan85
  10. jayefrost reblogged this from pythias
  11. zmassey reblogged this from camdamage
  12. elfieprince reblogged this from destructivemusic and added:
    I WANNA WRITE A STORY ABOUT THIS PLACE OMG.
  13. shadowpainter reblogged this from theastralcity
  14. caristia reblogged this from kellenmeloni
  15. dustboys reblogged this from velodrone
  16. dorybot reblogged this from zawaii
  17. sallystark reblogged this from glasmond
  18. ziggyinthisthang reblogged this from resistapathy and added:
    This is pretty amazing
  19. tyslacker reblogged this from resistapathy
  20. resistapathy reblogged this from dimetri
  21. chantillykitty reblogged this from pythias
  22. michikazu reblogged this from hm7
  23. dimetri reblogged this from logan85
  24. jedimasterkevin reblogged this from jonathancurtis
  25. jonathancurtis reblogged this from austinontheinternet and added:
    This is fucking cool, terrifying but cool.
  26. bgnori2 reblogged this from hm7
  27. hm7 reblogged this from velodrone
  28. douchefagg reblogged this from velodrone

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i'm grainne. i like art and science, and leonardo da vinci, who also liked art and science. i also like cycling around and climbing on rocks. and some other stuff but i can't remember.

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