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Architecture in Vietnam is something of a hotchpotch of styles, but
most constructions can be included in five main categories –
vernacular, Chinese, ethnic, colonial and modern.
Vernacular Vietnamese architecture:
Vernacular Vietnamese buildings are distinctive- unlike most of the
rest of Asia, they have a massive wooden framework, rather than the
lightweight ‘stilt’ method used elsewhere. Good examples can be seen
all over the country, and particularly in the villages around Hanoi.
Larger public buildings, such as ‘communal houses’, are also of wooden
construction. Stone and brick were reserved for royal or significant
religious buildings. Nearly all vernacular buildings were
single-storey, with heavy flat-tiled roofs to withstand typhoons. None
had ceilings or chimneys.
Traditional Chinese architecture:
The Chinese influence on Vietnamese architecture is seen most clearly
in pagodas and palaces. The distinctive roofs with elevated hip rafters
and half-round tiles, heavy ornamentation and lavish use of
embellishments and motifs are distinctive features. However, although
superficially similar to their Chinese antecedents, the architectural
details of Vietnamese pagodas differ greatly. However, the layout,
orientation, statues, steles and other external elements of pagodas are
usually Chinese in origin.
Colonial French architecture:
Vietnam’s colonial buildings are more than a straightforward
replica of French architecture. Adapting to a very different climate
led to many distinctive features, making the style into a genre in its
own right. Good examples of colonial buildings can be found all over
the country, but especially in Hanoi, Da Lat and Hai Phong. The General
Post Office and the Town Hall in Ho Chi Minh City, the many mansions
and the Opera House in Hanoi, and the interior of the Municipal Theatre
in Hai Phong are all splendid examples.
Ethnic vernacular architecture:
Vietnam has many distinct ethnic groups, and many have preserved
their indigenous architecture, some of which is highly attractive. The
30m long sweeping straw roofs of the Ba Na ‘rong’ houses and the E De
long houses that sometimes extend over 100m are particularly
interesting.
Modern architecture in Vietnam:
Heavy taxes on the frontage of old vernacular town houses led to the
long, thin ‘tube’ houses of Hanoi and Hoi An. Today, spiralling land
values and status has placed a premium upon height. Narrow houses built
on a handkerchief of land rise as much as seven or eight stories to
overtake the neighbours. They are often built in a strange pastiche of
French architecture with ornate balconies, cupolas and decorations
fashioned in cement and concrete and painted in pastel colours. High
ceilings, ceramic tiled floors and large windows reflect the climate,
but the extensive use of wrought iron screens and shutters on windows,
and metal gates and doors, are the response to a high level of burglary!
Modern public architecture:
Outside the towns and cities, public buildings tend to be functional
rectangular buildings with little architectural merit. Particularly in
Hanoi, but also in Ho Chi Minh City and other cities, there are several
interesting examples of Soviet architecture dating back to the
post-French war period when the influence of the USSR was at its
strongest in Vietnam. Good examples are the State Bank, a blend of
Soviet and oriental styles, the People’s Committee building, typical of
the Soviet ‘brutalism’ architectural period, and Ho Chi Minh’s
Mausoleum. All three are in central Hanoi.
More recent public and commercial building architectural styles have
varied from the pseudo-classical façade of the Trang Tien Plaza
shopping centre to the futuristic Sofitel Plaza Hotel, both in Hanoi.
The glass and concrete high-rise towers, malls and office blocks of Ho
Chi Minh City tend to be closer to mainstream international traditions
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