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1.Hunghom
developers unfazed by rejection
1. Hunghom developers unfazed by rejection
CHLOE LAI, SCMP 13 August 2005

Workers continue renovation work at the Hunghom
Peninsula estate yesterday.
Picture by Oliver Tsang
Developers
will resubmit their plans for a luxury upgrade of the harbourfront
Hunghom Peninsula estate as early as next week, after learning they
were rejected because of a minor problem with emergency exits.
"The
government's demands are just minor amendments; we can improve our
plan and send it to the government again very quickly," said
a spokeswoman for Sun Hung Kai Properties, co-owner of the seven
blocks with New World Development.
The
spokeswoman said the rejection did not affect work under way to
remove lights and kitchen cabinets.
The
flats were built by the developers for sale under the government's
Home Ownership Scheme (HOS) but were left unoccupied when sales
were frozen in 2002 to prop up the property market.
The
Buildings Department rejected the renovation plans on Thursday,
saying some of the work violated the Buildings Ordinance.
The
proposals, submitted in June, included combining flats, revising
internal layouts, adding lifts, renovating external walls, and altering
car parks and access for emergency vehicles.
A
department spokesman said it would take a month to process the amended
plans.
Friends
of the Earth said it hoped the developers would minimise pollution
from their renovation, citing the presence nearby of a primary school
and Polytechnic University. The developers said 95 per cent of material
removed from the flats would be recycled.
Rejection
of the plans was the latest twist in a saga that triggered accusations
of collusion between the government and developers, and then outrage
from environmentalists and politicians when the companies said they
wanted to demolish the estate.
The
flats were built jointly by New World and a company that was later
acquired by Sun Hung Kai under the now-defunct HOS Private Sector
Participation Scheme.
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