Public housing estates in Yuen Long

Contents

Overview

Name Type Inaug. No Blocks No Units Notes
Fung Ting Court 鳳庭苑 HOS 2001 2 312
Long Ping Estate 朗屏邨 TPS 1986 15 7,563
Shui Pin Wai Estate 水邊圍邨 Public 1981 7 2,394

Fung Ting Court

Fung Ting Court (Chinese: 鳳庭苑) is a Home Ownership Scheme in Yuen Long Town. It has 2 blocks built in 2001. It was formerly the site of Yuen Long Factory Estate (Chinese: 元朗工廠大廈) . The estate was built by the Resettlement Department in 1966, in order to proviude squatter factories and cottage workshops. In 1973, the management of the estate was taken over by the Hong Kong Housing Authority. In 1997, the clearance of the estate was completed. In 2001, two small blocks were built in the site.[1][2]

Name[3] Type Completion
Yan Ting House Concord 2001
Wah Ting Court

Shui Pin Wai Estate

Shui Pin Wai Estate (Chinese: 水邊圍邨) is the second public housing estate in Yuen Long Town. It has 7 residential blocks mainly built in 1981,[4] but one of the blocks, Dip Shui House, was later built in 1998.

Name[5] Type Completion
Bik Shui House Old Slab 1981
Ying Shui House
Woo Shui House
San Shui House Single H
Chuen Shui House
Hong Shui House
Dip Shui House Small Household Block 1998

Long Ping Estate

Long Ping Estate (Chinese: 朗屏邨) is a mixed public/TPS estate in Wang Chau[6] near MTR Long Ping Station. It is the third public housing estate in Yuen Long Town. It has a total of 15 residential blocks completed between 1986 and 1989.[7] In 2005, some of the flats were sold to tenants through Tenants Purchase Scheme Phase 6B.[8][9]

Name[10] Type Completion
Yuet Ping House Harmony 2 1987
Hor Ping House
Shek Ping House 1986
Kang Ping House
Kam Ping House Double H
Sau Ping House
Chu Ping House
Po Ping House
Ngan Ping House 1989
Yin Ping House
Fung Ping House
Cheuk Ping House
Yuk Ping House Trident 2 1986
Wah Ping House 1989
Hay Ping House

Long Bin Interim Housing

Long Bin Interim Housing (Chinese: 朗邊中轉房屋) is an Interim Housing estate in Castle Peak Road, Ping Shan, Yuen Long.[6][11] It had eight residential blocks completed in 1999.[12] Unlike public housing estates, it was used to accommodate affected families who are not immediately eligible for allocation of public rental housing.[13]

See also

References