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Report - - Shek Lo Mansion, Fanling, Hong Kong, August 2015 - August 2019 | European and International Sites | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - Shek Lo Mansion, Fanling, Hong Kong, August 2015 - August 2019

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HughieD

28DL Regular User
Regular User
1. The History
Shek Lo is a colonial house near Fanling (also referred to as ‘Peter Lodge’). It was built in 1925 by Mr ‘Peter’ Tsui Yan Sau (1889-1980), a convert to Catholicism who was also the founder of Wah Yan College and was the first principal between 1919-1926. Tsui was the architect and contractor of his own house. Built on a piece of land calved-out of the adjacent lychee orchard, the two-storey building was a blend of Chinese and Western architectural styles. The colonial-style front porch and European big windows with shutters were complemented by a roof typical of rural Chinese mansions (a pitched roof supported on wooden purlins and battens and covered by Chinese clay tiles); Chinese interior layout; a Chinese doorway with a sliding timber gate; and a kitchen at the back with a wood-burning stove which had a huge wok. In the annex building to the right, a beautiful hardwood floor was installed upstairs to serve as a party room for the teenage sons. After the War, HKU Alumni held its first dance there when hardwood dance floor could not be found anywhere.

I found these fascinating memoirs from Paul Tsui Ka Cheung (1916-1994), fifth son of Peter Tsui Yan Sau, about the layout of the house:

“It was a hybrid between what was conventional in rural China and what my father [Peter] might have personally interpreted to be the American equivalent, as he had read from many magazines he bought for reference. It was a two-storied square house, without much external ornamental decorations. The porch in front, was supported by columns of pillars, which gave you an impression as the White House of Washington DC might give you. As you entered, there was a fairly spacious hall, intended as Reception hall and Parlour combined, typical of a Chinese Rural Mansion. There was a dining room on the right, a staircase compartment separating the dining room from the kitchen at the rear. On the left, there was a guest room, and two additional rooms, of which one could be used as a Den, the other an extra bed room which could be used as a store room, as required. The spacious centre room on the floor immediately above, was intended as the family room. The sleeping chambers were all located upstairs. The space beneath the staircase was enclosed to be the bathroom. There was no running, piped water. A bucket was used for hot water, which would be shovelled over the body with a hand towel, in a manner not unlike the taking of a shower, for our baths. The flooring for the ground floor was of cement concrete, rendered smooth and the flooring upstairs was of hard wood laid on beams of China Fir poles”.

Other notable features include the courtyard and located in the middle of the parapet of the roof, a semi-circular brick wall engraved with the characters “Shek Lo”.

Paul Tsui Ka Cheung went on to recall:

“We moved into "Shek Lo" three days before the Chinese New Year in February, 1925 [when Paul was 9]. The house was hardly ready. The external walls were not even plastered. The scaffolding outside the house was still up. The walls inside were just finished and newly whitewashed. Windows and doors however were already securely installed. There were no electricity, and we had to use kerosene [lamps] for lighting.”

Due to the lack of a suitable church in the local area, Peter Tsui allowed local Catholics to hold Catholic Mass at Shek Lo. However, in 1930 Tsui took a concubine (called Chiu Ying) and the local priest had to write to the Bishop to tell him there would be scandal if they continued to use the house for Mass. The problem was solved when Tsui and his concubine moved to a new house nearby at Ma Wat village. He left Shek Lo to his wife, Chin Kang Tai, who found the acceptance of her husband’s concubine difficult. In 1941 with the Japanese invasion of Hong Kong, Shek Lo was apparently trashed. However, it remained a family residence until the 1980’s when it was sold by the executors of Peter Tsui's estate.

Shek Lo circa 1950:

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Today the building is in desperate need of repair and restoration, having sat abandoned since the late 80s. It was, until recently, open access with the land in front maintained clear. However in the Summer of 2014 a fence was built around Shek Lo and its main entrance had been under renovation. This now appears to have halted and the property is now being rapidly enveloped in woodland undergrowth. Apparently Shek Lo is Grade II listed.

2. The Explore
Getting nostalgic for HK given I didn’t manage to get back their last summer. One of my fave places places ever. First clocked it out of the window of my sister-in-law’s flat that we were staying in in Fanling back in 2003 (see photo below)

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It took me another 13 years before I explored the interior of it properly. I’ve now been round it three times and it hasn’t changed drastically bar the occasional half-hearted attempt to cut the vegetation back. Who knows what the future holds for this place. It should really be made into a museum. However, this is unlikely given the land it is build on outstrips the value of the building many times over.

3. The Pictures

First visit back in August 2015:


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Revisit in August 2017:

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Does this place the abandonment circa 1979?

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And finally, most recently in August 2019:

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The red room (first time I’d seen this):

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Calamity Jane

i see beauty in the unloved, places & things
Regular User
What a little beauty. Great design, and I love the vegetation all around it. Love the old shutters, the design on the red wall & that green on the ceiling. Reminds me of a tranquil Dojo. Such a shame its so damaged.:thumb
 

HughieD

28DL Regular User
Regular User
What a little beauty. Great design, and I love the vegetation all around it. Love the old shutters, the design on the red wall & that green on the ceiling. Reminds me of a tranquil Dojo. Such a shame its so damaged.:thumb
lovely looking building ...loved your phottos :)

Cheers both. The roots of the trees on the roof are really doing some damage. Still saleable but something tells me that the owner would rather see it fall down.
 
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