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Battleship Island & Other Ruined Urban
The Ruin of Ruins: Battleship Island in Japan Haunted... lovely... intense...
(left image credit: Sebastien Tixier, right image original unknown)
What's
now decay and rot once was bright and brilliantly full of hope: Who
lived here? What were their lives like? What happened? How did it all
come apart? How did it all crumble to almost nothing?
In the case of Hashima Island, or Battleship Island (Gunkanjima
in Japanese) as it's often called, hope and optimism became dust and
decay because one black resource (coal) was replaced by a cheaper black
resource (oil). Populated first in 1887, the island – which is 15
kilometers from Nagasaki – only began to really, and phenomenally,
become populated much later, in 1959.
This island does look like a battleship from this angle:
Hashima
is, for many ruin fans, the rotting and collapsing grail, the benchmark
all other crumbling structures are measured against – and seeing
pictures of the place it's easy to see why. Not only is Hashima
frighteningly preserved in some places, as if the residents had just
stepped out as few minutes before, but it is also, contrarily,
spectacularly falling down. Beyond its current awe-inspiring state of
decay, the island's dramatic isolation and its bizarre history make it
the ruin of ruins.
Before
that day when coal was replaced by oil, Hashima was the most densely
populated area – ever. On that tiny island, crammed into what are now
decaying tenements, were thousands of miners, their families (including
children), support staff, administration, and everything necessary to
make their lives at least tolerable. It's hard to imagine when looking
at the empty doorways, ghostly apartments, and hauntingly vacant
corridors what the lives of those people might have been like.
Famous Walled City of Kowloon: Living Inside the Maze
Unlike
the post-apocalyptic drama of Hashima, we can very easily imagine what
the lives of the residents of the famous Walled City of Kowloon were
like – in fact we can ask them, as their city was torn down in 1993.
The reason why the Walled City gets so frequently mentioned as a ruin
is, while it was there, it was as if the people who lived in it were
living their lives in the guts of some great, monstrous, maze.
To
say that the city had a long history is an understatement, as its roots
go back to the Song Dynasty (960 AD, if you need to know the date).
The city was a curiosity for a very long time – a strange bit of legal
knotting making it Chinese and not British -- but the labyrinth didn't
start to grow appreciably until after the second world war when it
became a haven for... well, people without a state: refugees, squatters,
thieves, drug-dealers, and much more (and much worse). Neither Great
Britain nor China refused to have anything to do with the immense warren
of walkways, apartments, workshops, factories, brothels, gambling dens,
and opium dens.
The
Triad, who represented most of the criminal element, were pretty much
forced out in the 70s – by a police attack some 30,000 strong, no less
-- but the city remained as a kind of anarchist warren, a
world-unto-itself where the residents built and maintained pretty much
everything.
Looking
at pictures of the city today, it looks like some kind of ramshackle
prison, a cyberpunk nightmare of florescent lights, spectrally
flickering televisions, and mazes of perpetually damp hallways and
trash-strewn alleyways. Yet, for many people living there, it was simply
home.
In
any case, the end of the living ruin that was the Walled City came to
an end in the 90s when the residents were evacuated and their fantastic
city-within-a-city was torn down. Interestingly, the Walled City has a
strong connection to Hashima as, at its height, the Walled City had a
population density almost rivaling that Japanese island. Before the
bulldozers came, it had a staggering population of 50,000 people, all
living in an area the size of a few city blocks.
Here are some of the videos showing the exterior and the ghastly interior of the Walled City: Video 1, Video 2, Video 3
Ruins of a... Vacation Spot From the Next Century
But
if you're talking ruins you have to talk about the ruin FROM THE FUTURE
.. or at least a ruin that looks like it came from there.
If
you travel to Taiwan, up north to be specific, you will find yourself
in a what looks like the fantastic set from some kind of big-budget
science fiction epic: the Resort of San Zhi. Built in the 1980s, the resort was supposed to be, planned to be, a vacation spot from the next century .. BUT TODAY!
Unfortunately,
the dreams of the developers stayed just that and, beyond a few
remarkably-well-preserved, sections, San Zhi never materialized. But
what they did build, and that's still there in all it's ruinous glory,
is amazing: crumbling residential pods on a bleak and blasted landscape,
a mini-sprawl of the future falling...
Decaying,
rotting, crumbling, collapsing – ruins are the remains of what was, of
the lives of the people who lived in them. In the case of Hashima
Island, what remains teases us with thoughts of what it must have been
like to live in the most densely populated area in the world... with the
Walled City of Kowloon, we instead dream of what it must have been like
to be a resident of a labyrinthine living, breathing ruin; and then
there is the painful folly of San Zhi – a ruin not from the past but
strangely, wonderfully, from a tomorrow that might have been.