The buildings were burning in sequence and no one seemed to be stopping it
At least 95 confirmed dead and 200+ missing in Hong Kong's worst residential fire in decades at Wang Fuk Court complex during renovation work. Bamboo scaffolding—still common in Hong Kong construction—enabled rapid fire spread across eight 31-story towers during extreme fire danger alert conditions.
- At least 95 dead, 200+ missing, 70+ hospitalized at Wang Fuk Court in Tai Po district
- Eight 31-story residential towers with 4,000 residents and nearly 2,000 apartments
- Bamboo scaffolding enabled rapid fire spread during 36.6 million euro renovation project
- Three men arrested on suspicion of involuntary manslaughter; construction site smoking violations previously documented
- Fire danger alert at red level since Monday; Hong Kong one of few places still using bamboo scaffolding in construction
A massive fire at Wang Fuk Court residential complex in Hong Kong killed at least 95 people with over 200 missing. Bamboo scaffolding spread flames across eight towers housing 4,000 residents; three men arrested on suspicion of involuntary manslaughter.
Fire swept through Wang Fuk Court on Wednesday morning, moving with terrifying speed across the bamboo scaffolding that wrapped the eight residential towers in Hong Kong's Tai Po district. By the time authorities could account for the damage, at least 95 people were confirmed dead. More than 200 remained unaccounted for. Over 70 others lay hospitalized, many with severe burns. The complex itself—eight blocks of 31-story buildings housing nearly 4,000 residents across almost 2,000 apartments—was in the middle of a 36.6 million euro renovation when the flames started.
Three men have been arrested on suspicion of involuntary manslaughter as investigators work to understand how the fire began and why it spread so rapidly. Some firefighters were injured fighting the blaze, which authorities say is now under total control. But the speed of the disaster left police unable to conduct floor-by-floor searches in the early hours, making it impossible to confirm whether all residents had evacuated. That uncertainty accounts for the high number of missing persons.
Wang Fuk Court's renovation had already generated resentment among residents. The scale of the project and the disruption it brought had created friction in the community. When the fire came, that tension sharpened into anger. One resident, Cheung, told the South China Morning Post that the buildings were burning in sequence and no one seemed to be stopping it. She recalled that construction workers had been caught smoking on site—violations serious enough to draw fines—raising questions about safety oversight during the renovation work.
The bamboo scaffolding that enabled the fire's spread is a distinctive feature of Hong Kong construction. The city remains one of the few places in the world where this material is still standard for building work. The scaffolding created a highway for flames to travel between towers, turning what might have been a contained incident into a catastrophe. The timing made it worse: the Hong Kong Observatory had maintained a red fire danger alert since Monday, warning of extremely high risk for both forest and urban fires based on humidity levels, wind speed, and vegetation dryness.
This disaster is not isolated. In October, a fire had broken out in the exterior scaffolding of Chinachem Tower, forcing evacuations and sending four people to hospitals. That fire was limited to the facade and did not penetrate the building's interior, but it exposed the vulnerability of bamboo structures to ignition. Experts pointed then to welding sparks from construction work or discarded cigarettes as likely causes. The Building Department confirmed the tower's structural integrity but identified loose materials on the facade that required immediate removal.
Chief Executive John Lee convened an emergency cabinet meeting to monitor the unfolding crisis. Hundreds of displaced residents were moved to four temporary shelters. The investigation now centers on whether negligence in the renovation process—inadequate fire safety measures, insufficient supervision, or failure to enforce smoking bans—contributed to the scale of the tragedy. The three arrests suggest authorities are pursuing that line of inquiry seriously.
What happened at Wang Fuk Court has exposed systemic vulnerabilities in how Hong Kong manages construction safety and urban renewal. The bamboo scaffolding that has served the city's building industry for generations suddenly looks like a liability. The question now is whether this disaster will force a reckoning with practices that have been accepted for decades.
Citações Notáveis
The buildings were burning in sequence and no one seemed to be stopping them— Cheung, Wang Fuk Court resident, to South China Morning Post
In the early hours of the fire, it was impossible to conduct floor-by-floor searches to confirm all residents had evacuated— Tai Po Police leadership
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Why did the fire spread so quickly across eight separate towers?
The bamboo scaffolding connected them. It's like a wooden bridge between buildings—flames don't stop at a property line when there's a continuous structure carrying them across.
But bamboo scaffolding has been used in Hong Kong for a long time. What changed?
Nothing changed about the material itself. What changed is that we're now seeing what happens when you combine old construction methods with modern high-density housing and renovation work. Four thousand people in one complex, all at risk simultaneously.
The residents seem angry about more than just the fire itself.
They are. The renovation was already unpopular—36 million euros of disruption. Then when the fire came, it felt like the system had failed them twice: once during the renovation, once during the emergency response.
Three men were arrested for involuntary manslaughter. What does that tell us?
It suggests investigators found evidence of negligence, not accident. Smoking on a construction site where fines had already been issued. That's not a random spark—that's a pattern of safety violations.
Is this a Hong Kong problem or a broader construction problem?
Both. Hong Kong is unique in still using bamboo at this scale. But the real problem is that renovation work in dense urban areas creates risk, and that risk isn't being managed the way it should be.
What happens to the 200 missing people?
That's the hardest part. In the chaos of evacuation, with no floor-by-floor confirmation possible, some people may have gotten out and simply not checked in. Others may not have. The search continues.