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Hong Kong NGOs can apply for up to HK$60 million to transform vacant government sites, lawmaker says

  • Arts groups, youth centres, community recycling centres or animal rights groups will all be eligible to apply for the funding
  • There are some 830 vacant government sites in the city

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Kwan Ti Public School in Fanlight was closed in 2004 and has been left vacant since. Photo: Dickson Lee

Hong Kong’s non-governmental groups are able to apply for a subsidy to transform vacant government sites for their purposes, capped at HK$60 million (US$7.7 million) for each project, a lawmaker revealed on Monday.

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The cap, disclosed by the Democratic Party’s Roy Kwong Chun-yu, is the latest detail of the government’s HK$1 billion (US$130 million) fund to revitalise those sites and was one of the initiatives introduced in February by Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po.

Lawmaker Roy Kwong Chun-yu. Photo: Edward Wong
Lawmaker Roy Kwong Chun-yu. Photo: Edward Wong

The cap means the total subsidy will be enough to fund about 17 full cost revitalisation projects, while there are some 830 vacant government sites, including 28 abandoned schools.

Kwong said the Development Bureau gave him the details after repeated requests, and that the bureau planned to put the plan forward for discussion in the Legislative Council at the end of this month.

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He said non-profit organisations such as arts groups, youth centres, community recycling centres or animal rights groups would be eligible for the subsidy.

“I think the programme can benefit some arts groups, providing them a chance to breathe when they are facing eviction from industrial buildings,” Kwong said.

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