
Government reveals 20 per cent of 4,500 modular units were damaged during two typhoons; most to be repaired, some dismantled for recycling
Around one-fifth of the 4,500 modular units that were previously used as community isolation and treatment facilities in Hong Kong sustained damage during two strong typhoons earlier this year, the city’s Development Bureau has confirmed.
The so-called pandemic camps at the Tseung Kwan O fill bank — where construction waste is stored — were found to have dozens of modules with collapsed roofs and broken metal-panel walls.
In its response, the bureau said that while most of the affected units suffered damage to their metal panel walls, the structural steel frames remained intact.
It stated that those modules will undergo repairs, be properly protected, and reused on future public works projects.
A “minor portion” of units deemed unsuitable for reuse will be dismantled, with steel components separated and sent for recycling.
The bureau emphasised that the modular units had originally been procured in response to the pandemic and later shifted to standby status.
Of the units damaged, approximately 20 per cent were impacted by the storms given the location of the storage site and the exposure to high winds.
The authority noted that storage above the fill bank, where the modules were sited, left them vulnerable to typhoon-force gusts.
While the precise number of units removed from the reuse pool has not been publicly disclosed, the bureau confirmed that repairs will be prioritised to maintain Hong Kong’s capacity for redeployment of modular units in future infrastructure projects.
The move is aligned with wider adoption of modular integrated construction (MiC) and reuse of pandemic-era assets, forming part of the city’s drive toward more sustainable building practices.
Analysts note that Hong Kong’s increasingly severe typhoon seasons — with recent storms breaking long-held records — place growing emphasis on resilience of modular infrastructure storage, transport and siting.
The damaged modules highlight an emerging risk: that assets designed for rapid deployment during a crisis must also withstand extreme weather when stored or repurposed.
The disclosure comes amid public scrutiny of the modular-unit stockpile, including questions over the long-term plans for the isolation facilities once the pandemic emergency receded.
The bureau’s statement now gives a clearer picture of losses and the path forward: reuse when feasible, recycling where necessary, and repair works beginning promptly to support future projects.
For now, the Hong Kong government’s approach underscores its commitment to repurpose pandemic-era infrastructure, limit waste, and safeguard value from previously deployed units, even as climate-driven weather events increasingly test the resilience of such assets.
The so-called pandemic camps at the Tseung Kwan O fill bank — where construction waste is stored — were found to have dozens of modules with collapsed roofs and broken metal-panel walls.
In its response, the bureau said that while most of the affected units suffered damage to their metal panel walls, the structural steel frames remained intact.
It stated that those modules will undergo repairs, be properly protected, and reused on future public works projects.
A “minor portion” of units deemed unsuitable for reuse will be dismantled, with steel components separated and sent for recycling.
The bureau emphasised that the modular units had originally been procured in response to the pandemic and later shifted to standby status.
Of the units damaged, approximately 20 per cent were impacted by the storms given the location of the storage site and the exposure to high winds.
The authority noted that storage above the fill bank, where the modules were sited, left them vulnerable to typhoon-force gusts.
While the precise number of units removed from the reuse pool has not been publicly disclosed, the bureau confirmed that repairs will be prioritised to maintain Hong Kong’s capacity for redeployment of modular units in future infrastructure projects.
The move is aligned with wider adoption of modular integrated construction (MiC) and reuse of pandemic-era assets, forming part of the city’s drive toward more sustainable building practices.
Analysts note that Hong Kong’s increasingly severe typhoon seasons — with recent storms breaking long-held records — place growing emphasis on resilience of modular infrastructure storage, transport and siting.
The damaged modules highlight an emerging risk: that assets designed for rapid deployment during a crisis must also withstand extreme weather when stored or repurposed.
The disclosure comes amid public scrutiny of the modular-unit stockpile, including questions over the long-term plans for the isolation facilities once the pandemic emergency receded.
The bureau’s statement now gives a clearer picture of losses and the path forward: reuse when feasible, recycling where necessary, and repair works beginning promptly to support future projects.
For now, the Hong Kong government’s approach underscores its commitment to repurpose pandemic-era infrastructure, limit waste, and safeguard value from previously deployed units, even as climate-driven weather events increasingly test the resilience of such assets.







































