Hong Kong doesn’t need a vast new town rising from the seas off Lantau
Tom Yam says the government’s vision for the East Lantau Metropolis rests on flimsy rationale, amid a lack of political will to secure targeted land elsewhere from vested interests


Unless it is the Hong Kong government, using taxpayer money, to build what it calls the “East Lantau Metropolis”.
Hong Kong environmentalists unfurl protest banner on Kau Yi Chau against plan for ‘East Lantau Metropolis’
According to this “planning vision”, the East Lantau Metropolis will be created by reclaiming land around two islands east of Lantau and connecting them to Mui Wo in south Lantau. On these 1,000 hectares will rise housing for 400,000 to 700,000 people, and a business district, with essential infrastructure such as utilities, telecommunications, schools and clinics. Bridges or tunnels and railways totalling 29km will link this vast new town with the rest of Lantau, Hong Kong Island and Kowloon.
According to the government’s own figures on population and housing, this metropolis is bound to become the mother of all white elephants
Since then, four requests to conduct an analysis of the need for such a metropolis in the context of population growth and housing supply have been rejected.