EASTERN
Eastern District Waterproofing: Street-Level Statutory Repair-Order Data (Updated Monthly)
Quick answer
Based on the Buildings Department's section 26 statutory repair-order register, Eastern District is one of our 4 current focus districts — see the table below for the actual numbers and street-level breakdown. One important limitation: Eastern is a Hong Kong Island district, and our current address-keyword classification method has a known lower coverage rate for Hong Kong Island addresses (many carry only a building name with no area suffix) — meaning Eastern's true repair-order count is quite likely higher than the number shown below.
Classified total for this district: 24 (data covers 2026-06, checked on 2026-07-14).
Streets with the most registered repair orders in Eastern District
The table below lists the streets in Eastern District with the highest classified repair-order counts in our current data (streets only — no individual buildings are named):
| Street | Classified repair orders |
|---|---|
| SHAU KEI WAN RD | 12 |
| SAI WAN HO ST | 6 |
| CHAI WAN RD | 2 |
| SHAU KEI WAN MAIN ST | 2 |
This ranking is compiled using our address-keyword classification method. Eastern is a Hong Kong Island district, and our current method has a known lower coverage rate for Hong Kong Island addresses — records without an area suffix in the address can't be classified, so Eastern's count is more likely to be undercounted than a New Territories district (Tsuen Wan, Tuen Mun, Kwai Tsing). It's also not a seepage statistic: a statutory repair order covers structural and drainage defects, a broader scope than seepage alone. Full methodology is linked below. See our classification method and why Hong Kong Island coverage is lower
These streets are mostly Eastern District's older, harbour-adjacent areas (unverified on the ground)
A rough, street-name-level impression only: the top-ranked streets cluster around a few of the district's older street blocks — that is purely a street-name-level impression; we haven't verified individual buildings' age or condition, and we don't infer anything about your building from this data. Wherever you are in Eastern District — roof, external wall, window or bathroom seepage — we inspect and quote the same way.
We serve all 18 Hong Kong districts — this page simply reflects one district our data happens to highlight; it doesn't mean other districts go unserved.
Related reading
- External Wall Waterproofing: the Government Says 'Hire a Professional' — That's Us
- Window Seepage: Very Common, but We Don't Have a Published Price Yet
- Hong Kong's Statutory Repair Order Map: How Many Buildings in Your District Are Under Order?
- The Joint Office Guide: 3 Things to Know Before You Complain
External-wall or window seepage in an older Eastern District building? Tell us on WhatsApp
Our WhatsApp and phone hotline are launching soon — please use the form below in the meantime and we'll reply as quickly as we can.
Frequently asked questions
Does external-wall seepage on an older building always require work on the whole facade?
Not necessarily. External walls are common property, so a whole-facade job generally needs Owners' Corporation consent and a tender process. But a small section within your own flat's title (like a window-frame joint) can usually be booked directly — we confirm which scope applies before quoting.
Does this ranking mean Eastern District has an especially bad seepage problem?
Not necessarily, and there's an extra caveat here: the ranking itself only reflects classified repair-order counts (a broader scope than seepage), and Eastern is a Hong Kong Island district where our classification method has a known undercount — the true number is quite likely higher than what's shown, so this ranking shouldn't be used to judge severity directly.
Could there be more unclassified cases in Eastern District than shown here?
Yes, and more so than in a New Territories district. Eastern is on Hong Kong Island, where our current address classification method has a known lower coverage rate — many Hong Kong Island addresses carry only a building name with no area suffix and can't be classified. Full methodology is on the territory-wide repair order map.