Close
Cart (0)
Login
Register
By using our website, you agree to our use of cookies as described in
Cookie Policy
.
OK
X
Digital Asset Management by Orange Logic
Company
Your account
Register
Hire an Illustrator
Terms and conditions
Privacy & Legal Notices
Prints and Gifts
Educational Resources
Science Photos
Connect
LinkedIn: Science Source Images
Facebook: Science Source Images
YouTube: ScienceImages
Instagram: ScienceSourceStock
© 2022 Science Source Inc.
All rights reserved
Go to Login page
Hide details
Conceptually similar
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
Cage housing, Hong Kong
Description:
Cage housing, Hong Kong. Cage houses are a type of temporary accommodation that exists in Hong Kong, one of the most crowded and densely populated cities in the world. The rooms are cramped cage-like units, large enough for a bed and a few possessions, but little else. Other facilities will be shared with other residents. Sometimes the units are subdivided with plywood into smaller cell sections. Originally built for construction workers, these units have become the long-term home of some of the poorest and most vulnerable in Hong Kong society, including the elderly, single people, the unemployed, ex-prisoners, and economic migrants.
Credit:
Patrick Landmann/Science Source
Unique identifier:
SS2429375
Legacy Identifier:
SN3891
Type:
Image
Size:
3714px × 5586px (~59 MB)
Add to cart
Direct link to Image
Copy URL to clipboard
Add to lightbox My First Lightbox
Add to cart
Tags
21st century
accommodation
adult
asia
asian
bed
C005/3600
C0053600
cage housing
cell housing
china
chinese
clothing
communal
cramped
crowded
demographics
deprived
eating
economic deprivation
economic migrant
economically deprived
economics
flat
food
hardship
hong kong
house
housing market
human
inhabitant
inhabitants
male
man
meal
migrants
oriental
overcrowded
person
poor
population density
possessions
poverty
real estate
resident
residential
residents
sitting
slum
slums
small
social deprivation
socially deprived
sociology
television
urban
urban planning
watching
worker
workers