Author and writer Susan Blumberg-Kason has been interested in Hong Kong since an early age, when she dreamed of the the neon streets and double-decker buses. She soon moved there to study and married a Chinese man. The memoir about her experiences, "Good Chinese Wife," came out this year.
While in Hong Kong, Blumberg-Kason took photographs to document her surroundings. Later, when sifting through her many shots, she realized how closely they mirrored photographs taken in Hong Kong by her parents 50 years before.
Blumberg-Kason had shared both her own photographs, taken in 2012, and her parents' photographs from 1962, which give parallel views of a city that has grown exponentially. In those 50 years, Hong Kong Island and the surrounding areas saw tons of new construction and a massive influx in population.
Here's a photograph by Blumberg-Kason's mother took from Victoria Peak in 1962:![Hong Kong 1962 32]()
In 2014, the same view looked like this:![hong kong 2012]()
Here's the view from Hong Kong Harbor, looking upwards, in 1962:![Hong Kong1]()
This is the view from the Harbor now.![hong kon 2012]()
The Hong Kong Sheraton, a popular hotel in the Tsim Sha Tsui area, has been in the area for decades. It looked like this in 1962:![Sheraton 1974 HK]()
In 2012, it looks like this.![hk 2012]()
Similarly, the New Territories peninsula area has seen much growth over the years. This is how it looked in 1962:![Along the KCR 1974]()
And this is how it looks now. The areas population now constitutes more than 52% of Hong Kong's population overall.![hk 2102]()
Central Hong Kong, now the heart of massive protests, was quite a fancy and glamorous place in 1962.
Here's how it looked in 2012. The building in the center is the Hong Kong Supreme Court Building.![hk 2012]()
And for reference, here's what the area looked like earlier this month when it was filled with protesters.![hk protests]()
Some things haven't changed, though. For example, the outdoor markets from 1965...![Market 1965]()
...look pretty similar in many respects to the ones you can still go today in Hong Kong.![HK 2012]()
And, if you're lucky, you might see a Junk ship.
1962:![HK JUNK]()
2012:![HK JUNK]()
SEE ALSO: See What Hong Kong Looked Like 42 Years Ago
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