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Amoy Gardens (Chinese: 淘大花園; Jyutping: tou4 daai6 faa1 jyun4; Pinyin: táo dà huā yuán) is a high-density middle-class private housing estate in Hong Kong completed from 1981 to 1987.[1] It was the most seriously affected location during the 2003 SARS outbreak, with over 300 infected people.
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Amoy Gardens is located in the Ngau Tau Kok area of Kowloon, in the north east of Kowloon Peninsula of Hong Kong. It was on the land formerly the factory of soy sauce and other foods of Amoy Food Limited. Administratively, it is part of the Kwun Tong District.
Amoy Gardens comprises 19 blocks, from A to S, with height ranging from 30 to 40 floors.[1] The eight blocks A-H are 33 stories/105 m high, and situated on a podium 14 m high, which houses a commercial and shopping center. These eight blocks have 8 apartments per floor arranged in a cruciform shape. Each arm of the cruciform contains 2 apartments.[3]
There is a shopping mall (Amoy Plaza) as well as a food square within the entire Amoy Gardens estate.
Towards the end of March 2003, an outbreak of SARS occurred among residents of Amoy Gardens. As of April 15, 2003, there were a total of 321 cases of SARS in the estate. A concentration of cases was recorded in block E, accounting for 41% of the cumulative total. Block C (15%), block B (13%) and block D (13%) recorded the second, third and fourth highest incidence of SARS infections. The other cases (18%) were scattered in 11 other blocks.[4] Most of the initial 107 patients from Block E lived in flats that were vertically arranged.
All residents were subsequently moved to Lei Yue Mun and MacLehose Holiday Camps for isolation. In the mid-2003, the authority concern found that there were serious problems of water pipes which may have contributed to the spread of SARS.
The estate was decontaminated and the residents could return.
Amoy Gardens is served by the Kowloon Bay Station of the MTR metro system.[5]
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Coordinates: 22°19′28″N 114°13′00″E / 22.32445°N 114.21659°E
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