九龍城砦をマイクラで再現!リアルすぎる再現度に住民も驚愕

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まだあった!九龍城砦をMinecraftで完全再現だと?!


九龍城砦の航空写真

かつて「世界一人口密度の高い場所」と言われた、九龍城砦。1990年代に取り壊されたその異質な空間が、なんとMinecraftで蘇った?! 驚きのプロジェクトをご紹介します!

伝説の迷宮都市、九龍城砦とは?

九龍城砦。
それは、2.6ヘクタールという狭いエリアに、多い時には5万人もの人々が暮らしていたという、信じられないような場所でした。

Minecraftで再現された九龍城砦

もともとは宋の時代の軍事拠点、清の時代の砦として存在していましたが、その後イギリスの統治下に入り、法の隙間のような場所になってしまったのです。

中国内戦の難民が流れ込み、無計画に増築が繰り返された結果、迷路のような、他に類を見ないスラムが形成されました。

なぜ今、九龍城砦がアツいのか?

取り壊されてから久しい九龍城砦ですが、その圧倒的な存在感は、今もなお多くの人々を魅了し続けています。

Minecraftで再現された九龍城砦

その理由は一体何なのでしょうか?

  • カオスと秩序の融合:無秩序に建て増しされた建物群は、一見すると混沌としていますが、その中には独特の美しさ、力強さがあります。
  • 人間ドラマの舞台:犯罪、貧困、そしてたくましく生きる人々。九龍城砦は、人間の光と影が交錯する、ドラマチックな場所でした。
  • 失われた世界への郷愁:急速に変化する現代社会において、九龍城砦は、忘れ去られた過去、古き良き時代を象徴する存在なのかもしれません。

YouTubeチャンネル「Sluda Builds」によるMinecraftプロジェクト

そんな九龍城砦の魅力を、Minecraftで見事に再現したのが、YouTubeチャンネル「Sluda Builds」のSludaさんです。



Sludaさんは、徹底的なリサーチと驚くべき技術力で、九龍城砦の複雑な構造、独特の雰囲気を忠実に再現しています。

Minecraftで再現された九龍城砦の通路

細い路地、建物内部の通路、屋上まで、隅々まで作り込まれたその完成度は、まさに圧巻!

九龍城砦がMinecraftで蘇る意味

Sludaさんのプロジェクトは、単なるゲームの域を超え、九龍城砦という貴重な文化遺産を後世に伝えるための、重要な試みと言えるでしょう。

Minecraftという現代的なツールを使うことで、若い世代にも九龍城砦の魅力を伝え、記憶を継承していくことができるのです。

Minecraftで再現された九龍城砦

あなたもSludaさんのMinecraftプロジェクトを通して、九龍城砦の魅力に触れてみませんか?

関連情報

Minecraftで再現された九龍城砦の航空写真

九龍城砦のディープな世界へ、いざ!


Kowloon Walled City, considered the densest settlement on the planet, was demolished in the mid-1990s. At its height in the ’80s, it was home to around 33,000 people—a government survey provided some idea of the local population—but estimates are often closer to 50,000. And that’s all within an overall footprint of 2.6 hectares, or just shy of about 6.5 acres. It’s an area smaller than five American football fields or about 2.5 New York City blocks.

A bit of an infrastructural and legal accident, Kowloon Walled City started as a Song Dynasty military outpost, then became a Qing dynasty fort in 1810. It sat within the boundaries of Kowloon City, Hong Kong, which was eventually controlled by the British after 1842’s Treaty of Nanking. But the British never really did much with the location, and for decades, only a few hundred people lived there. In 1940, only a yamen—a central government office—a school, and a single house stood in what would eventually transform into a city of monumental and overbearing proportions.

Kowloon Walled City continues to fascinate us today, as nothing on its scale had existed before and will likely never again. For an architect who goes by Sluda Builds on YouTube, the astounding, densely packed metropolis spurred an elaborate Minecraft project. From the ground up, including a surprising landscape grade that often doesn’t read clearly in photographs, he meticulously reconstructs the city’s skyscrapers, mezzanines, interior passageways, rooftops, and alleys.

Many of the Walled City’s buildings were practically conjoined, with ad hoc doorways and halls interconnected so thoroughly that, supposedly, one could travel from one side of the city to the other without ever stepping outside. And what space did exist outside was limited to narrow passages just large enough for people to get by on foot.

While today’s architects and engineers probably bristle at the myriad contemporary code violations here, the city emerged because it fell into a bit of a legal gray area due to a kind of governance limbo. Restrictions came in the form of limited space.

The British didn’t have much involvement with the walled city, and then the Nationalist Chinese Government began declaring jurisdiction in the mid-20th century. Starting in 1945, refugees of the Chinese Civil War began flooding in, with at least 2,000 settling there by 1947. By 1950, that number had grown exponentially, as a fire in 1950 destroyed the homes of more than 17,000 residents. But the metropolis kept growing from there.

a still from a video by Sluda Builds of a Minecraft version of Kowloon City

Sluda’s project highlights the structural complexity of Kowloon Walled City through the bright—and very tidy—medium of Minecraft. He was drawn to the idea because not only is the settlement notorious and historically fascinating, it also possesses a strange aesthetic allure that’s difficult to pin down. He wanted to explore why it has this effect.

“These are serious high-rise buildings, some of them reaching 14 stories tall, yet constructed from the ground up in a vernacular style that’s more common in human-scale neighborhoods like the ones in Rio, for example,” Sluda says. “The sheer amount of character and personality in just one building is enough to be unique and interesting, but side-by-side visually with 50 others, all unique as well—to me, this is a major part of why this city has become so iconic.”

Check out more Minecraft projects on Sluda Builds’ YouTube channel and Instagram. You might also enjoy photographs of the city captured by Romain Jacquet-Lagrèze or Hitomi Terasawa’s now out-of-print illustrated guide, complete with elaborate cross-sections.

a still from a video by Sluda Builds of a Minecraft version of Kowloon City
a gif from a video by Sluda Builds of a Minecraft version of Kowloon City, in which individual passageways are being added into the buildings
a still from a video by Sluda Builds of a Minecraft version of Kowloon City
a gif from a video by Sluda Builds of a Minecraft version of Kowloon City as seen from the air
a still from a video by Sluda Builds showing a historical photograph of Kowloon Walled City
The real Kowloon Walled City, photographed from the air




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