Keep Exploring Architizer by Creating a Free Account or Logging in.
This feature is for industry professionals.
To unlock it, signup and then join or add your company.
To unlock this feature,
signup and then submit your professional details.
This project revitalizes Mui Tsz Lam, a remote 360-year-old abandoned Hakka village in rural Hong Kong, by transforming Old House into a multi-purpose village hub with a university-village partnership. It is funded by the competitively awarded government funding from the Countryside Conservation Funding Scheme under the Countryside Conservation Office.
Once a 3-bay courtyard mansion, it only had a rammed earth perimeter wall remaining. We regrouped the subdivided ownership of three lots as one design, with publicly-funded restoration for the central bay, private rebuilding and landscaping co-creation on the two side bays.
The primary configuration (Front Courtyard, Central Hall, side Loft and bedroom/storage) was retained. New windows, doorways and clerestory glazing opened up the house for contemporary usage. The Courtyard, symbolic for “gathering four waters” was reinstated its granite paving and semi-outdoor kitchen for re-enacting communal food events (firewood cooking, pickling). A timber shutter opening onto the adjacent Patio recalls built-in cabinets. A compost toilet and shower were added as sustainable design.
The Central Hall is enclosed by the old rammed earth wall, a new rammed earth wall, restored blue-brick wall and white render, embodying the house’s rich narratives and family histories. The embedded steel structure elevates a double-pitched roof to oversail and protect the walls, while solar-panelled skylights and new clerestory glazing improves natural lighting. A co-created artist lantern installation celebrates Old House’s relaunch. The Side Loft with bedroom/storage below is partitioned by a large wooden wall cabinet inspired by traditional joinery with patterned glass. The Patio’s landscaping works is co-created by volunteers and construction students, reusing excavated roof-tiles and artifacts for paving and redecoration.
The transformed venue can now accommodate exhibitions, seminars, hands-on workshops, community dining and co-living. Further planned programmes include work-stay, artist-in-residence, camper base, team-building venue as well as festive cultural events. Restoring Old House as village hub to reconnect people via a collaborative process, the project has empowered the village community towards self-sustaining renewal.