The colossal bamboo structure, spanning nearly thirty-nine hundred square metres and rising five storeys high, was installed in Yuen Long’s Kam Tin district as the centrepiece of the decades-old Kam Tin Heung Grateful Worship Ritual, a traditional village festival that draws communities together in thanksgiving and celebration.
This year’s edition of the festival, now in its thirty-fourth iteration, featured the extraordinary bamboo altar as both a sacred ritual space and a performance venue hosting deities’ effigies, theatre and cultural displays.
Skilled local craftsmen employed generations-old bamboo construction techniques to assemble the towering pavilion, reflecting the region’s deep heritage in bamboo craftsmanship and its enduring place in Hong Kong’s cultural identity.
The festival attracted widespread attendance, with visitors drawn by the altar’s scale and craftsmanship as well as by ceremonies and celebratory traditions that reinforce community bonds.
Such bamboo structures — once common in Cantonese festivals and celebrations — serve as vital expressions of intangible cultural heritage, combining architectural ingenuity with spiritual and communal significance.
Participants and spectators alike praised the display as a vibrant affirmation of local tradition in a modern cityscape.

















