Southorn Playground
Southorn Playground is a sports and recreational ground in Wan Chai, Hong Kong. It comprises a football pitch, four basketball courts, and a children's playground.
Southorn Playground | |
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Entrance sign along Hennessy Road | |
Location on Hong Kong Island | |
Type | Public park |
Location | Wan Chai Hong Kong |
Area | 0.9 ha (approx.) |
Opened | 11 July 1934 |
Operated by | Leisure and Cultural Services Department |
Open | Year round |
Public transit access | Wan Chai Station |
Southorn Playground | |||||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 修頓遊樂場 | ||||||||
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Southorn Playground is bounded by Hennessy Road to the north, Luard Road to the west, Johnston Road to the south, and buildings to the east. It has been Wan Chai's main recreational area since the 1930s. It was named in 1934 after Sir Wilfrid Thomas Southorn, the Colonial Secretary from 1925 to 1936.
Though the site is not big, it is often used for district functions such as fun fairs and sports matches. It is also popular among local residents as a place for daily relaxation and socialisation.
History
Early years
The land on which the Southorn Playground sits was reclaimed from Victoria Harbour as part of the Praya East Reclamation Scheme during the 1920s. In 1929, the government set up the Playing Fields Committee to study the provision of children's playgrounds. The committee recommended setting aside areas for children, and Thomas Southorn suggested preserving the land between Johnston Road and Hennessy Road as a playground.[1][2]
Two designated playgrounds, the Blake Gardens and the Wanchai grounds (today's Southorn Playground), were allotted by the government to the Chinese Y.M.C.A. and the Rotary Club, respectively. On 1 July 1933, the new Children's Playground Association (today the Hong Kong Playground Association) took over responsibility of these grounds.[3] A public toilet and bathhouse opened on 12 February 1934 at the junction of Hennessy Road and O’Brien Road.[4]
A formal opening ceremony was held for the then-Wanchai Children's Playground, officiated by Thomas Southorn and Rotary Club president Ts'o Seen Wan, on 11 July 1934.[1] The playground was actually open in some capacity prior to the commemorative opening ceremony – an April 1934 news article stated that the facility already had an average daily attendance of some 275 children.[3]
Following the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong (1941–1945), the government endeavoured to rehabilitate the derelict playgrounds of the territory. The Government Gazette announced on 11 October 1947 that the Southorn Playground would be re-allocated to the Children's Playground Association – unlike other playgrounds, which remained in government hands in anticipation that the Urban Council would ultimately take over their management.[5][6]
The Children's Playground Association constructed the War Memorial Centre, a welfare and sports centre, in the eastern portion of Southorn Playground. It was completed in 1950 and offered children recreational opportunities as well as a library.[7] A new covered basketball court opened at the centre on 5 June 1951.[8] This eastern portion of the playground also hosted the Family Planning Association and the Violet Peel Clinic.
1980s developments
By the 1980s, the western outdoor part of the playground was managed by the Urban Council, while the Playground Association managed the covered stadium in the eastern part.
To make way for the construction of the Mass Transit Railway (MTR)'s first line on Hong Kong Island, the Island Line, various Urban Council sites had to be borrowed or permanently alienated from the council's purview. The chairman of the council, A. de O. Sales, was adamant that the play areas of Southorn Playground not be encroached upon.[9] In early 1981 the council agreed to hand over two sites at Southorn Playground: a refreshment kiosk in the northwestern portion of the park (now home to a railway tunnel ventilation shaft), and the site of the O'Brien Road Public Toilet, which had been demolished earlier.[10]
In 1982, the Southorn Playground Temporary Market was constructed by the Urban Council to accommodate market stall lessees displaced during the redevelopment of the nearby Lockhart Road Market.[11] It was located on the present-day site of the basketball courts.
The War Memorial Centre, Violet Peel Clinic, and Family Planning Association in the eastern part of the playground were all demolished to make way for the MTR station that opened on 31 May 1985 as part of the first phase of the Island Line. They were temporarily relocated off-site during construction of the station.[12]
On top of the station the Southorn Stadium (修頓體育館), Southorn Centre (修頓中心), and Southorn Garden (修頓花園, a residential building) were built. The Southorn Stadium is an indoor recreational complex, owned by the Hong Kong Playground Association, intended as a replacement for the War Memorial Centre. The Southorn Centre is a commercial building that houses many government offices.
The Violet Peel Methadone Clinic is now located on the ground floor of Southorn Garden, while the Family Planning Association is housed in the ground floor of the Southorn Centre.
2005 redesign proposal
Wan Chai District Council and the British Council invited English designer Thomas Heatherwick and urban renewal specialist Fred Manson to improve the playground in 2005.[13] The proposal aimed to redevelop the space through a public art intervention. It was hoped that the project would serve as a model of community participation in public art in Hong Kong. The project aimed to generally improve and update the playground, and make it an artwork in its own right.
An unnamed developer offered to pay for half the redevelopment while the District Council sought about HK$100 million from the government to make up the difference. The Leisure and Cultural Services Department was uninterested, stating, "In view of the keen competition for public resources for the development of much needed leisure facilities in other areas with greater urgency, e.g. new towns like Tung Chung and Tin Shui Wai, there is less priority for a redevelopment proposal which aims at adding value to an existing well-used venue."[14]
2005 WTO Ministerial Conference
Southorn Playground was originally one of the designated protest areas for the WTO Ministerial Conference of 2005 (MC6), which was held during 13–18 December 2005 at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre. However, the government decided it would not be used for demonstration purposes after taking into account the Wan Chai District Council's view that the playground is too far from the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre (0.4 km away) and protesters may end up cramming in Wan Chai. The playground therefore was only reserved for MC6-related public activities such as public forums, bazaars and cultural performances.
Use of facilities
Southorn Playground was a major landmark to senior residents of Wan Chai. Back in the 1950–1960s, it was a place of both work and entertainment. Its character changed throughout the day.
In the morning, labourers (commonly known as "coolies") gathered in the playground to start their day. They gave each other Chinese herbal massages to alleviate fatigue and pain because it was costly to seek proper medical treatment. In the evening, the playground transformed into an open-air, working class night club where visitors enjoyed Chinese magic and kung fu performances, as well as street food.
Nowadays, Southorn Playground remains popular among Wan Chai dwellers: senior citizens pass time by playing Chinese chess there, while young people regard it as one of their favorite spots for football and basketball.[15] The annual Adidas Streetball Challenge is held in the playground which attracts flocks of Hong Kong basketball fanatics and young spectators. It has also one of the most well-known basketball courts in Hong Kong, and street legends story often start in Southorn Playground.
Features
- Football pitch
- Basketball courts (4)
- Covered spectator stand
- Children's playground
- Changing rooms and toilets
- Southorn Stadium
- Indoor arena 2000 seat and home to Eastern Long Lions basketball team
- Multipurpose rooms
Recent developments
Southorn Stadium (the indoor arena building) was renovated in 2013.[16]
Under the Wan Chai Station Lee Tung Street Subway Scheme, a 100-metre pedestrian subway is being built to connect the redeveloped Lee Tung Street with the MTR station.[17] The children's playground and one of the four basketball courts at Southorn Playground have been periodically closed to facilitate construction.
Additionally, the Civil Engineering and Development Department has commissioned a study into increasing the use of underground space in densely built-up areas. The study focuses on Tsim Sha Tsui, Causeway Bay, Happy Valley, and Admiralty/Wan Chai. Southorn Playground has been identified as one of the open spaces to be investigated for underground space development potential.[18]
References
- "Wanchai Playground: New centre for children opened by Colonial Secretary". South China Morning Post. 12 July 1934. p. 9.
- Or, Kar-lok, Carol (1999). "An urban space re-creation: Southorn Playground". University of Hong Kong.
- "Favourable Report: First Year's Working of the Playground Association". South China Morning Post. 9 April 1934. p. 16.
- Chan, Ka-lam (2012). "Ordinary heritage of the ordinary people: Hong Kong's public bathhouses". University of Hong Kong.
- "Southorn Playground". South China Morning Post. 12 October 1947. p. 7.
- "CHILDREN'S PLAYGROUND: Work Upon Welfare Centre Commenced at Wanchai". South China Morning Post. 8 February 1950. p. 3.
- "Visits to welfare centre". South China Morning Post. 4 December 1969. p. 6.
- "WAR MEMORIAL CENTRE: New Basketball Court Opened By Hon. D. Benson". South China Morning Post. 6 June 1951. p. 2.
- "Minutes of the meeting of Standing Committee of The Whole Council". Urban Council. 3 March 1981. p. 9.
- "Alienation of UC Sites to the MTRC in connection with the MTR Island Line". Urban Council. 3 April 1981.
- "Redevelopment of the Wan Chai Market". Urban Council. 7 July 1986.
- "Wanchai clinics to be moved". South China Morning Post. 23 April 1982. p. 17.
- "Public involvement the best design for urban planning". South China Morning Post. 25 March 2005. p. 10.
- Lai, Chloe (2 October 2006). "Residents still waiting for playground facelift". South China Morning Post. p. 3.
- "Southorn Playground". Lonely Planet. Retrieved 6 January 2017.
- "About Us". Southorn Stadium. Hong Kong Playground Association.
- "Wan Chai Station Lee Tung Street Subway". Highways Department. Retrieved 6 January 2017.
- "Stage 1 Public Engagement for the Pilot Study on Underground Space Development in Selected Strategic Urban Areas launched (with photos)". Hong Kong Government. 7 November 2016.
External links
Media related to Southorn Playground at Wikimedia Commons Media related to Southorn Stadium at Wikimedia Commons - Southorn Stadium – Hong Kong Playground Association