Plagued by overcrowding, Hong Kong has been exploring creative options to accommodate its burgeoning population. One such option? A retrofitted cement water pipe called an OPod.
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Imagine a cozy , pelvic girdle , industrial - themed living space with scads of natural light accessible through your smartphone . That ’s precisely what CEO and architect James Law debut in Hong Kong last month at the DesignInspire exhibition . inclose the OPod : the tube house that could be Hong Kong ’s answer to a crippling trapping crisis
Did we forget to mention that the plate is in reality contain inside a 100 to 120 - straightforward - foot concrete water tubing ? Even though it has a small footmark and cheap finishes , it ’s bright , trendy , and prosperous .

OPod tube houses like this were designed by James Law Cybertecture and were presented at the city’s DesignInspire exhibition earlier this year.
More important , the OPod could revolutionize the housing industry in overcrowded Hong Kong where thousands have been relegated to inhumane " cage home base . "
Envisioning The OPod
" I came up with the musical theme behind the OPod when I was on a construction site,“saysthe chairman ofJames Law Cybertecture , James Law . " I walked into one of them ( a concrete water pipe ) , and I was surprised by how fully grown they were . "
https://www.facebook.com/CybertectureOpod/videos/536857593505339/
Law got the melodic theme for the tube houses then and there .

" I thought : would n’t it be a really swell approximation to use these leftover concrete water pipe to create vast , microarchitecture — that could be at very low monetary value , and also quite interesting for young people in Hong Kong ? "
It assume the architecture firm just one calendar month toround outthe approximation of fashioning a home from a extol drain organ pipe .
" We take to populate small in the city , because we ca n’t give the space — however , it does n’t mean that we have to live in a squalid , or inhuman environment like subdivided flat or cage homes … A well - contrive little space can still be quite a hospitable , very warm , very cozy household . "

Hong Kong’s Housing Crisis
Hong Kong is one of the mostexpensive places on the satellite to live ; the median property price comes in at 19 times the medial yearly household income .
For lower - income occupant , sometimes the only option is to live inside one of Hong Kong ’s notoriouscage homes . These are only expectant enough to fit a bunk bed and are often push together within another modest elbow room .
Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images78 - year - old Leung Shu prepare to resolve in for the even beside his coop . He divvy up this flat base with four other citizenry .

This is the eccentric of thing you could expect when onlyseven percentage of the cityis zone for housing . With the average priceper square footof city flats starting at about $ 1,380 USD ( HK$10,700 ) , mass need to get originative .
Here ’s where the stylish and relatively roomy Hong Kong tube homes come in . The rent for an OPod would be $ 383 per month , and technically two people can live there comfortably .
Law tell that " young masses demand some sort of full point in their lives in the metropolis where they ’ll be able-bodied to open to be ( while ) building up their resource . They can rent it for six months , one year … and during that clip they can build up their resource . "

https://www.facebook.com/CybertectureOpod/videos/320782165494131/
When the alternative for the more than 20 pct living below the poverty crinkle is literally a cage , the OPod seems fairly appealing .
Not Just A House But A Social Housing Project
There is also a giving architectural plan in the work . Law wants to do even more than avail young people to afford comfortable homes . He is trust in the future that tubing business firm can germinate into a social housing project .
The organisation would see that young tenants have two - thirds of their rent re - invested for them and then have that rent pay back — with pastime — after they are able to move on .
" For me personally , as the God Almighty of this project , my passion is somehow to help these young people , " Law continues , " to parent them , to protect them , to give them a decent stone’s throw up in life . "
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After this look at the OPod , take more on Hong Kong ’s alarming and long - runninghousing crisis . Then take a look at these seven awesome tiny homes that provesize does n’t matter .
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Daniel Berehulak/Getty Images78-year-old Leung Shu prepares to settle in for the evening beside his cage. He shares this apartment floor with four other people.
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