Amoy Canning locations – Ngau Tau Kok Road, Amoy Gardens, Ngau Chi Wan – clarification needed?

HF: I am somewhat confused about whether the contemporary Amoycan Industrial Centre was part of the area of Amoy Cannings large industrial concern which is now Amoy Gardens. The maps below show the two locations as being close together but did Amoy Canning in its prime actually extend north to include the site of the present Amoycan Industrial Centre before the latter was later built?

Thomas Ngan added a comment to the Amoycan article linked below, “Amoy’s own website (http://www.amoy.com/en/amoyHistory.php) reads “1929 – Amoy set a factory in 53 Ngau Chi Wan, Hong Kong. For soy sauce and canned foods manufacturing.
The lot would probably cover the whole city block, including present day Amoy Gardens. I wonder if the other blocks of the Industrial Centre had been redeveloped into the blocks surrounding the existing building?”

HF: However, 53 Ngau Chi Wan, Hong Kong appears to be in East Choi Hung further north than a) and b). See map c).

Can someone clarify these locations?

Both a) Amoycan Industrial Centre, 7 Ngau Tau Kok Road (marked) and b) Amoy Gardens

Amoy Canning Centamap - both Amoy Gardens and Amoycan Industrial Centre

a) Amoycan Industrial Centre, 7 Ngau Tau Kok Road

Amoy Canning centamap Amoycan Industrial Centre, 7 Ngau Tau Kok Road

b) Amoy Gardens

Amoy Canning centamap Amoy Gardens

c) 53 Ngau Chi Wan (Street), Choi Hung

Amoy Canning Google map 53 Ngau Chi Wan (Street)

Related Indhhk articles:

  1. Amoy Canning – a brief history since 1908
  2. Amoycan Industrial Centre – Kowloon Bay – connection to Amoy Canning?
  3. Amoy Canning – connection to WW2 POWs and a particular Englishman?
  4. World War Two – BAAG reports, Amoy Canning (Tinning) Co.

 

3 Comments

  • Phil

    Just some supposition on my part:

    The website mentions the Amoy Industrial “Estate” (i.e. an area rather than a single building) was set up in 1962. Surely an “estate” would feasibly have covered both locations you mentioned in a + b.

    Regarding c – perhaps 53 Ngau Chi Wan refers to a house/building in the village itself rather than a number on the modern day street? It mentions a “factory”, but it’s possible the factory was on a small scale?

    • Phil

      Points taken. What we need is a map (or specific information) showing the exact location of the Amoy Estate. And whether this included the Ngau Chi Wan house/building/factory as you suggest.

      Hopefully this will be provided at some point.

      Hugh

      • Phil

        Hi Hugh

        Sorry, I meant to say that I don’t think the Ngau Chi Wan would have been part of the Amoy industrial estate. I think it’s too far away and the time lag between each site’s opening is too long. I was just suggesting that the Ngau Chi Wan site may have been a very small – but separate – operation.

        Cheers
        Phil

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