Residents struggling to make ends meet in one of the world's most expensive cities resort to sleeping in tiny properties that are so crammed that they have been dubbed 'coffin homes'.
More than 200,000 people in Hong Kong, China, live in partitioned shoebox apartments that offer just a few feet of space.
The former British colony was ranked as the world's most unaffordable city for a 14th consecutive year and has one of the world's highest rates of inequality.
Even these subdivided flats which can barely fit a double bed have become notorious for high rents.
Travel blogger Drew Binsky, 34, last week shared an astonishing video inside one of the miniscule properties which he labelled the 'sad reality of life in HK'.









