Can Hong Kong find quick fixes for corruption in building maintenance?

Bid-rigging practices are back in the spotlight following a deadly blaze in Tai Po, but how widespread is the problem in Hong Kong's building maintenance sector and how do syndicates operate?

Since taking the helm of the owners’ corporation at her Hong Kong housing estate 12 years ago, 63-year-old Chan Wai-ling has received numerous reports of falling concrete, water leakage and other problems that should have been fixed during multimillion-dollar renovations a decade ago.

“Whenever there is a typhoon, water leaks into our homes and damages the walls … We cannot sleep as we have to look out for the leakage,” said Chan, referring to Grandway Garden, a subsidised housing estate in Tai Wai with 864 flats across three blocks, where owners paid HK$91 million (US$11.7 million) for renovations.

The estate recently hired a contractor for additional repairs costing each household at least HK$10,000, on top of the HK$70,000 to HK$110,000 per owner for major works conducted between 2013 and 2016.

“It’s as if the renovation never took place,” said Chan, chairwoman of the owners’ corporation management committee.

Residents sought a meeting for more project details, but the then-chairman failed to address corruption allegations and eventually resigned after at least 5 per cent of owners called for a re-election, Chan said.

The meeting, which under the law should have been held within 45 days, was delayed for months in 2013. Owners sought help from the Home Affairs Department but were told to resolve the dispute in court.

This case highlights potential bid-rigging and corruption in Hong Kong's building maintenance sector, thrust back into focus after the deadly Tai Po blaze.

Relaterede artikler

Illustration of the catastrophic fire at Wang Fuk Court in Tai Po, Hong Kong, engulfing seven blocks and claiming at least 159 lives.
Billede genereret af AI

Hong Kong's Tai Po estate fire kills at least 159

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

A 43-hour blaze on November 26 devastated seven blocks at Hong Kong's Wang Fuk Court in Tai Po, killing at least 159 people and injuring 79. Preliminary investigations point to scaffolding between the first and second floors of one block as the likely starting point. As of December 7, 13 households remain uncontacted, with authorities not ruling out further deaths.

Former senior project manager Raphael Chan has detailed rampant corruption in Hong Kong's construction industry, including bid-rigging syndicates linked to triads. He shared his experiences following the deadly Wang Fuk Court fire in Tai Po last month, which killed at least 161 people and prompted arrests tied to corruption and fraud. Chan has assisted the Independent Commission Against Corruption in probing such groups.

Rapporteret af AI

After a deadly fire in Tai Po that claimed 168 lives, Hong Kong's government has proposed measures to strengthen building maintenance. Experts, however, warn that these pledges only scratch the surface of long-standing systemic issues in the sector.

Hong Kong’s Housing Department will tighten declaration-of-interest rules after a surveyor arrested on suspicion of manslaughter failed to disclose his role at the fire-ravaged estate where he worked as a service provider. The blaze at Wang Fuk Court in Tai Po last November killed 161 people. Industry leaders have warned that undeclared interests could create conflicts and undermine public confidence.

Rapporteret af AI

The independent committee probing the deadly Wang Fuk Court fire in Tai Po held its first evidential session, uncovering six human factors behind the near-total failure of fire safety measures. Leading counsel Victor Dawes SC highlighted denials of responsibility by the Labour Department, Fire Services Department, and Housing Bureau's Independent Checking Unit for the HK$336 million project. Details also emerged on the death of firefighter Ho Wai-ho amid the November inferno that killed 168.

Hong Kong policies from Tai Po redevelopment to anti-bid-rigging measures appear shaped with little legislative input. Former lawmaker and veteran unionist Chan Yuen-han called it irresponsible for officials to offer an option that could take a decade, describing the city's long reconstruction timelines as a joke and a sign it has not kept up with the mainland. Other voices have urged the government not to rule out this most challenging and time-consuming option.

Rapporteret af AI

Amid ongoing fallout from November's deadly Tai Po fire—which claimed over 160 lives and displaced thousands—Hong Kong residents are pushing for a class-action lawsuit mechanism, but long-delayed legal reforms are standing in the way, as covered in prior reports on government safety pledges.

 

 

 

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis