Wang Fuk Court fire result of ‘systemic failure’ in policy, experts tell hearing
Two fire engineering experts told an independent committee inquiry that last year's Wang Fuk Court fire, Hong Kong's deadliest in decades, was caused by a "systemic failure" in public policy. The experts, professors Asif Usmani and Jiang Liming from Polytechnic University, cited a lack of strategies for fighting fires on high-rise building facades and the extended use of combustible materials in temporary works.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedTwo fire engineering experts told an independent committee inquiry that last year's Wang Fuk Court fire, Hong Kong's deadliest in decades, was caused by a "systemic failure" in public policy. The experts, professors Asif Usmani and Jiang Liming from Polytechnic University, cited a lack of strategies for fighting fires on high-rise building facades and the extended use of combustible materials in temporary works. They explained that Hong Kong's building regulations were primarily designed for interior fires, as external blazes were considered unlikely. The fire's magnitude was unprecedented, with flames spreading up the building facades at over 10 meters per second.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
4 extractedThere was a lack of strategies to fight flames on the facades of high-rise buildings.
Local building regulations were largely designed to prevent interior fires, as external blazes were considered unlikely.
Flames moved upwards along the buildings’ facades at more than 10 metres per second during the Wang Fuk Court fire.
Hong Kong’s deadliest inferno in decades was a result of a “systemic failure” in public policy.