I guess that the place that can better fit in the kind of experience you are looking for are the cage houses in Mong Kok
What about the Fes Medina (Fes el-Bali) in Morocco? Dense, labyrinthine, mixed residential-commercial, and pedestrian-only, but larger and more sparsely populated than the Walled City. Most parts are safe to visit, at least during the day, but guidebooks I’ve read suggest hiring a local guide as it is quite easy to get lost.
The closest thing to the Walled City is was an enormous recreation of the Walled City in a gaming arcade (!) in Kawasaki, an unprepossessing suburb of Tokyo. Here’s a blog post with lots of pictures. Address ウェアハウス川崎 (Warehouse Kawasaki-ten), 川崎区日進町3−7, official site (Japanese only). Update: Sadly, this seems to have permanently closed in 2019.
More authentic if rather less exciting are a series of walled villages in Hong Kong itself, of which Kat Hing Wai is the largest and best known. However, while packed, they’re pretty low-rise and not all that exciting.
The final alternative would be the infamous Chungking Mansions of Chungking Express fame, right in the middle of Kowloon and not all that far from the site of the Walled City. It’s a single building, but a very large one, and like the Walled City it’s crammed full of shops, guest houses (hostels), cramped apartments, shady characters, questionable hygiene, total lack of fire safety etc. However, it’s also very popular with backpackers (because it’s cheap!) and generally pretty safe if you keep your wits about you. See official(?) site and a nice BBC story.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
4 Mar, 2024
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