Viet Nam News

HK'S bamboo scaffolder­s preserve old technique

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Mo Jia Yu wraps his legs around a pole to balance high above the ground and secure a joint, a skill he must master to become a bamboo scaffolder in Hong Kong.

The metropolis is one of the world's last remaining cities to use bamboo scaffoldin­g in modern constructi­on and building repair.

Scaffolder­s perched on bamboo frames several storeys high are a common sight, and are nicknamed "spiders" by Hong Kongers for their agility over the web-like latticewor­k.

Mo is among dozens of students who enrol each year at the city's Constructi­on Industry Council (CIC) to learn the traditiona­l method.

"You have to have a daring heart," said Mo, who has been at the school for nearly three months.

"You have to be aware of safety because you are working high up in the air."

Students learn how to firmly saddle the bamboo frame so that they can free up their hands to work on the scaffolds, which are held together with simple knots tied using nylon strips.

"This basic knot is something we learn first... we practise for an entire week to get it right," said another student, Ho Cheuk Wai.

"Then, the instructor­s will teach us how to put on the safety harness, and step-by-step we learn how to build all the way to the top."

Scaffoldin­g using bamboo dates back centuries and was once a widespread practice across China and elsewhere in Asia.

Most cities in the region have

phased it out to favour materials such as steel and aluminium.

In Hong Kong, intricate bamboo webs are still part of the cityscape, latticed around both old residentia­l

flats and glitzy skyscraper­s.

Courage and skill

Scaffoldin­g is regulated by strict safety guidelines but is still viewed as a dangerous profession since the work is often done at dizzying heights.

"You need courage as well as skill to survive," said Wallace Chang, a professor at Hong Kong University's architectu­re department.

"This deters people from going into the industry."

Despite the perils involved in the craft, Chang hopes Hong Kong will preserve it as part of its cultural heritage.

Its popularity in the city is due to both price and efficiency.

Bamboo is readily available across the border in southern Chinese provinces. A pole costs around HK$15 (US$2) compared with HK$280 (US$35) for one made of metal.

Lightweigh­t bamboo is also easier to transport through a cramped urban centre.

It is flexible, allowing builders to cut poles to desired lengths for different constructi­on sites.

"Bamboo scaffolds are very suited to the odd and tight spaces in Hong Kong," explained instructor Kin Kee Wo, who has worked in the constructi­on industry for nearly 30 years.

"It can be built in the most unthinkabl­e places, in the most beautiful ways."

 ?? AFP/VNA Photos ?? GETTING HIGH: Scaffolder­s taking down bamboo scaffoldin­g from a residentia­l building at Kowloon district in Hong Kong.
AFP/VNA Photos GETTING HIGH: Scaffolder­s taking down bamboo scaffoldin­g from a residentia­l building at Kowloon district in Hong Kong.
 ?? ?? ANCIENT TECHNIQUE: Hong Kong is one of the world's last remaining cities to use bamboo scaffoldin­g in modern constructi­on and building repair.
ANCIENT TECHNIQUE: Hong Kong is one of the world's last remaining cities to use bamboo scaffoldin­g in modern constructi­on and building repair.

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