Advertisement
PostMag
Life.Culture.Discovery.
From our archives
PostMagCulture

In pictures: how typhoons have wreaked havoc on Hong Kong through the decades

South China Morning Post photographers have captured the power and devastation of major storms through the years

1-MIN READ1-MIN
Typhoon Rose caused severe damage to a Hong Kong squatter area after making landfall on August 16, 1971, packing winds of up to 165km/h. Photo: SCMP Archives
SCMP

Hong Kong is prone to typhoons that can barrel in from the South China Sea and the SCMP’s cameramen and women have braved the wild weather down the years to bring our readers images of the storms and their sometimes devastating aftermath.

Monster Typhoon Wanda pummeled the city on September 1, 1962, with 260km/h winds and torrential rains that saw 434 people reported killed and 72,000 left homeless in what the Post headlined as “Hong Kong’s Day of Terror”. Photo: SCMP Archives
Monster Typhoon Wanda pummeled the city on September 1, 1962, with 260km/h winds and torrential rains that saw 434 people reported killed and 72,000 left homeless in what the Post headlined as “Hong Kong’s Day of Terror”. Photo: SCMP Archives
Workers remove cracked panes at Central Plaza, Wan Chai, after Typhoon York brought 234km/h gusts in September 1999 that hit Hong Kong with such force that hundreds of windows on skyscrapers imploded. Photo: SCMP Archives
Workers remove cracked panes at Central Plaza, Wan Chai, after Typhoon York brought 234km/h gusts in September 1999 that hit Hong Kong with such force that hundreds of windows on skyscrapers imploded. Photo: SCMP Archives
Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x