Review | Borrowed Spaces celebrates Hong Kong’s essence: its street life - unplanned and undying despite officials’ best efforts to crush it
Meet the Mango King in his roadside urban farm and visit rooftop villages in Christopher DeWolf’s engaging and well argued book about the informal urbanism that defines the city and Hongkongers’ genius for improvisation
Borrowed Spaces: Life Between the Cracks of Modern Hong Kong
by Christopher DeWolf
Penguin Books
4 stars
The People versus The Man is a much-debated struggle in Hong Kong right now – as it has often been in other places throughout history. Journalist and photographer Christopher DeWolf’s debut book approaches the issue from a novel direction – from the streets, with a focus on Hong Kong’s so-called informal urbanism: hawkers carts, squatter villages, the repurposing of industrial spaces as cultural venues and the structures added to buildings.
