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How neglected Lai Chi Wo village became culturally vibrant, Unesco-award-winning farming settlement

  • Farming and cultural traditions have returned to Hong Kong’s remote rural settlement in New Territories despite departure of many residents at start of 1960s
  • Revival, including coffee grown as part of sustainable farming programme, sparked by nine-year HKU programme with funding from The Hongkong Bank Foundation founded by HSBC

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Mention the remote rural settlement of Lai Chi Wo today and images of its hillside farmland areas teeming with organic vegetables and plants including carrots, mustard greens and radishes may come to mind.

Located beside a mangrove forest and lush woodland within Plover Cove Country Park, on the northeastern coast of Hong Kong’s New Territories, the verdant village’s reputation for rural revitalisation was enhanced last year when it received the Special Recognition for Sustainable Development in the Unesco Asia-Pacific Awards for Cultural Heritage Conservation.

Yet the historic Hakka village of more than 200 picturesque houses, built more than 300 years ago, has not always been this vibrant. Once home to more than 1,000 residents, its population fell sharply starting in the early 1960s.

Tsang Wai-yip, village head of Lai Chi Wo, says many residents left after farming was no longer a feasible way to earn a living.
Tsang Wai-yip, village head of Lai Chi Wo, says many residents left after farming was no longer a feasible way to earn a living.
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“Agriculture stopped becoming a viable way to earn a living and so many residents left,” Tsang Wai-yip, village head of Lai Chi Wo, says.

The village grew decrepit and neglected, he says while poring over old black-and-white photographs of crumbling houses in the area.

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