Calls for faster rehousing of evicted Hong Kong subdivided flat tenants
Housing Bureau plans 180 emergency flats for short-notice evictions, but lawmakers demand faster, more flexible processing for urgent cases

Hong Kong authorities should offer more timely and flexible urgent accommodation for residents uprooted by a new regulation aimed at eliminating the city’s notorious subdivided flats, lawmakers have urged.
Their comments came on Tuesday after the Housing Bureau briefed lawmakers on plans to reserve up to 180 transitional flats in urban and extended urban areas for tenants evicted at short notice.
“I believe landlords do not wish to bear the legal consequences, even if they plan to quit the subdivided housing market. Most will follow tenancy agreements,” Leung told a radio programme.
“In most cases, evictions do not involve an entire building and affect only dozens of households with urgent rehousing needs. The 180 reserve units should be sufficient.”
However, Leung cited the bureau as saying it would take a week to arrange a reserve flat, as applicants must go through three rounds of review deemed necessary by the government.