
A deadly fire in an apartment complex in Hong Kong appears to have spread in part because the buildings were sheathed in bamboo scaffolding, a traditional building material that the authorities have been phasing out for safety reasons.
Dozens of people died on Wednesday in Hong Kong’s deadliest fire in decades. The blaze tore through the Wang Fuk Court residential complex in Tai Po, in the northern New Territories. The complex is made up of eight 31-storey towers containing about 2,000 flats that house about 4,800 people.
The exact cause of the fire is unknown but the bamboo scaffolding and green construction mesh may have helped it to spread quickly across the apartments.
Hong Kong is one of the last places in the world where bamboo is widely used for construction. The intricate lattices of poles bound together by zip ties and wrapped around gleaming sky-scrapers are a ubiquitous sight across the city.
Bamboo is valued for being lighter and cheaper than metal alternatives. Its use in construction is also seen as an art form in its own right, with bamboo towers being depicted in Han dynasty scroll paintings from 2,000 years ago. The plant is abundant in southern China, although most building sites in the mainland now use metal scaffolds as standard.
In March the government said it would start phasing out the use of bamboo in favour of fire-resistant steel because of safety concerns. It said 50% of public construction works would be required to use metal frames. As well as being fire-resistant, metal withstands Hong Kong’s humid weather better than bamboo.
Industrial accidents involving bamboo scaffolds have killed 23 people since 2018, according to official figures.
But the Hong Kong and Kowloon Bamboo Scaffolding Workers Union has previously said it opposes the retirement of bamboo. The natural variation in the size and shape of the poles means that binding them together into a scaffold requires the skilled eye of bamboo masters, who fear their livelihoods may be at risk if Hong Kong transitions to steel frames.