(Nov 28): Hong Kong authorities warned renovators of a high-rise complex about fire hazards one week before the housing estate was wrecked by the city’s deadliest fire in decades, raising questions about the effectiveness of safety enforcement.
The Hong Kong Labour Department said it had inspected Wang Fuk Court 16 times since renovation work started in July last year. Members of the public had complained about “issues relating to the scaffolding” in September 2024, it added in a statement emailed on Thursday to Bloomberg News.
Multiple written warnings were issued to the contractor about the need to adopt appropriate fire safety measures, including after the most recent inspection on Nov 20, the department added.
Inspectors also “consistently monitored” the installation of netting wrapped around the towers and found its quality certificate met official fire-proof standards, according to the statement.
The bamboo poles and nets that once encased the now burnt-out building have become the focus of an investigation into a blaze that incinerated the 2,000-apartment complex, after raging for more than 24 hours. Questions of culpability are at the centre of that probe, after authorities arrested three senior figures at the engineering firm conducting the renovations on suspicion of manslaughter.
The death toll now stands at 94 people. That’s a greater loss of life than the Grenfell Tower fire in London, which killed 72 people in June 2017. That blaze was later deemed to be the result of a “catalogue of failures” by the government and construction industry. It’s also by far Hong Kong’s deadliest blaze since 1957 when 59 people died in a tenement disaster.
See also: Hong Kong death toll rises to 94 with blaze near containment
“It’s premature to pass judgement on any officials or even on companies involved,” Hong Kong Legislative Council member Regina Ip told Bloomberg Television on Friday. “I think the government should take a good look at our existing legislation, and whether there are gaps in the requirements about fire retardant materials.”
Ip also questioned building management mechanisms that rely on owners who’re unpaid volunteers to supervise renovation works. “There have always been complaints about the awarding of contracts because there’s a lot of competition for this lucrative work,” she said.
The HK$315.5 million (US$40.6 million or $52.55 million) renovation project at the housing estate in northern Hong Kong once home to 4,600 people was being conducted by Prestige Construction & Engineering Co. That company is involved in 11 other residential building projects in Hong Kong, according to the government.
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Bloomberg News visited its office Thursday, but the shutters were down and no one responded. Phone calls to the office went unanswered.
Authorities are still investigating the cause of the fire.
Secretary for Security Chris Tang said investigators had found foam boards covering windows in the single building in the eight-tower complex that escaped the flames. “These foam boards are highly flammable and the fire spread very quickly, so we found their presence unusual,” he added.
Netting and plastic sheeting encasing the towers also burned far more intensely than expected, he said.
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