Dozens of deaths in an inferno at a Hong Kong residential estate have ignited debate over the role the city’s quintessential bamboo scaffolding played in the fire’s spread, as the government promised to phase it out.
Hong Kong is one of the world’s last remaining cities to use the frames for modern construction and building repair, a practice which dates back centuries in China and other parts of Asia.
The eight high-rises of Wang Fuk Court had been undergoing major renovations since last year, and were criss-crossed by lattices of bamboo and green protective netting when the fire took hold on Wednesday afternoon.
Hong Kong’s government said Friday falling bits of bamboo had helped spread the fire, after saying the day before that it was “imperative to expedite” a transition to metal scaffolding throughout the city for safety reasons.
Some locals have fiercely defended the practice of using bamboo, accusing the government of scapegoating and taking others to task over what they view as orientalist attitudes towards a long-renowned Hong Kong craft.
“This is a really complicated multifaceted problem,” Anwar Orabi, a civil engineer specialising in fire safety at the University of Queensland, told AFP.
He stressed that “a clear answer is premature at this stage”.
“The bamboo, or rather the entire scaffolding, was on fire… It is not the only contributor… but is very likely a component of it.”
Preliminary findings suggest the fire started on protective netting outside the lower floors of one building, and quickly spread upwards thanks to “highly flammable” foam boards, security chief Chris Tang said.
The foam boards were attached to windows, shattering the glass and causing the fire “to intensify and spread indoors”, he added.
The intense heat set the bamboo alight, and sticks of it broke off and fell to floors below, meaning the fire spread further, he said.
– ‘Inferior’ resistance –
Bamboo scaffolding is versatile and sustainable.
It is readily available from southern China and can be cheaply transported, set up and dismantled in tight spaces.
Industry representatives estimated in January that nearly 80 percent of Hong Kong’s scaffolds were made of bamboo, and there are thought to be around 3,000 practitioners in the city.
The city’s number-two official Eric Chan said on Thursday though that “despite its long history of use… (bamboo’s) fire resistance remains inferior to that of metal scaffolding”.
The government announced plans in March to drive wider adoption of the latter to improve safety.
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