Tai Wo Hau Estate

Tai Wo Hau Estate (Chinese: 大窩口邨) is a public housing estate in Tai Wo Hau, Kwai Chung, Kwai Tsing District, New Territories, Hong Kong. It has a total of 17 blocks following redevelopment.[1]

Tai Wo Hau Estate
Harmony blocks in Tai Wo Hau Estate
Kwai Yin Court

Kwai Yin Court (葵賢苑) is a Home Ownership Scheme court in Tai Wo Hau Estate and opposite to MTR Tai Wo Hau station.[2] It has two blocks built in 1993.

History

After the World War II, a large number of squatter dwellings were built in Tai Wo Hau, on the hill between Tsuen Wan and Kwai Chung, and on the fields of the villages north of Castle Peak Road. The squatter area was cleared in the 1960s for the construction of the Tai Wo Hau Resettlement Estate (大窩口徙置區).[3][4] The resettlement blocks were cleared between the 1970s and 80s. The current blocks were built between 1979 and 1993.

Houses

Tai Wo Hau Estate

Name[5]TypeCompletion
Fu Kwai HouseOld Slab1979
Fu Kwok House1984
Fu Keung House
Fu On HouseSingle H1980
Fu Wing HouseDouble H
Fu Wah House
Fu Pong House1984
Fu Man House
Fu Sau HouseLinear L1988
Fu Ping House
Fu Yat HouseLinear 1
Fu Nga House
Fu Ching House1989
Fu Pik House
Fu Tai HouseHarmony 11993
Fu Tak House
Fu Yin House

Kwai Yin Court

Name[6]TypeCompletion
Kwai Yee HouseNCB (Ver.1984)1993
Kwai Him House

Demographics

According to the 2016 by-census, Tai Wo Hau Estate had a population of 20,848. The median age was 47.7 and the majority of residents (96.2 per cent) were of Chinese ethnicity. The average household size was 2.7 people. The median monthly household income of all households (i.e. including both economically active and inactive households) was HK$21,280.[7]

Politics

For the 2019 District Council election, the estate fell within two constituencies. Most of the estate and Kwai Yin Court are located in the Lower Tai Wo Hau constituency, which was formerly represented by Wong Bing-kuen until July 2021,[8] while the remainder of the estate falls within the Upper Tai Wo Hau constituency, which was formerly represented by Hui Kei-cheung until July 2021.[9][8]

See also

References

22.3672°N 114.1229°E / 22.3672; 114.1229

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