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Stylish studio apartment with mid-century modern and colonial touches, Tiffany blue kitchen and ‘jewel box’ bathroom makes the most of Hong Kong vernacular architecture

  • A flat in a 1960s corner building in Hong Kong’s Sai Ying Pun area with ‘good bones’ was transformed from ‘boarding house accommodation’ to glorious studio flat
  • A sweep of steel-framed windows in the corner-building unit makes the most of its harbour view, as does its one-room layout with open-plan Tiffany blue kitchen

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The windows in this refurbished flat in a 1960s corner building in Sai Ying Pun, Hong Kong, offer sweeping views of the neighbourhood and of Victoria Harbour, their steel frames and brass handles a mix of mid-century modern and colonial styles. Photo: Eugene Chan

After Ralph Southampton was released from a three-week stint in a quarantine hotel in Sai Ying Pun in 2021, he stayed in the old Hong Kong Island neighbourhood for his first meal of freedom.

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Despite having lived in Hong Kong for 21 years, he was not familiar with the area, but a brief wander around was enough to motivate him to return for a second visit.

A 1960s corner building, a fast-disappearing example of Hong Kong vernacular architecture, piqued his interest, so when he spotted an estate-agency advertisement for an apartment in the same block, he went in on a whim.

“I was not in the least bit in the market for a flat but simply curious about the building,” says Southampton, a North American writer and keen open-water swimmer, who describes the property as “basic boarding-house accommodation” when he first viewed it.

When Alec saw the apartment and said it had amazing potential, I knew my gut instinct had been correct
Ralph Southampton

The 645 sq ft (60 square metre) flat had been divided into three tiny bedrooms, a galley kitchen and a crude bathroom, yet he could see it had good bones, offering the promise of a long sweep of windows which, back then, were chopped up by partition walls. He made an offer the next day and two months later he was a homeowner.

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His friend of 20 years and fellow swimmer Alexander Stuart, who runs the Hong Kong-based design and architectural firm Alexander Stuart Designs, agreed to take on the renovation, which took 16 months.

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