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Infrastructure Development and Heritage Conservation
over 3,100 buildings and create more than 60,000 job opportunities in the building, repair and maintenance industries.
The HKHS administers, on behalf of the Government, a $1 billion Building Maintenance Grant Scheme for Elderly Owners. Recipients may use the subsidy under the scheme to repair their premises or repay outstanding loans from the Buildings Department, the URA or the HKHS, which were made to keep their premises in proper condition. The scheme has received 14,719 applications since its inception in May 2008. Of these, 10,570 applications involving around $264.56 million were approved.
Since April 2011, five financial assistance schemes operated by the HKHS and the URA have been consolidated into an 'Integrated Building Maintenance Assistance Scheme, which provides building owners with comprehensive financial support.
The Buildings Department continued to serve repair orders on owners and occupiers of dilapidated buildings requiring them to repair defects in their buildings. In 2012, some 811 such orders were served and repairs to 747 buildings were completed.
Action Against UBWs
The Buildings Department has also stepped up its enforcement policy on unauthorised building works (UBWs) since 2011 to remove all UBWs erected on the exterior of buildings, including those on rooftops and podiums, as well as those in backyards and lanes irrespective of their risks to public safety. Priority enforcement continues to be taken on other UBWs, including those associated with sub-divided units and those on cantilevered slab balconies, as well as large unauthorised signboards. In addition, steps were taken to combat the building of new UBWs and to foster greater public awareness of the dangers and nuisances caused by UBWs. The Buildings Department has also strengthened enforcement to progressively tackle UBWs in village houses.
During the year, 44,562 cases of UBWS were attended to; 12,292 statutory removal orders were served and 13,581 UBWs were removed. A total of 2,104 offenders were prosecuted for failure to comply with the statutory removal orders and 1,716 cases were adjudicated, resulting in 1,285 convictions and fines totalling $4.76 million.
Urban Renewal
Urban renewal addresses the problem of urban decay and improves the living conditions in the old urban areas, while preserving buildings of historical, cultural or architectural value, and mitigates the potential social impact as far as practicable. The Development Bureau formulates policy on urban renewal and oversees the work of the URA, a statutory body established to conduct urban renewal.
The key initiatives of the Development Bureau's new Urban Renewal Strategy are now in place. The URA has implemented a new 'Flat-for-Flat' scheme offering affected owner-occupiers an option to purchase a flat in the URA's new development at the original site, or in the same
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