Nghi Tam Sculpture Trail
Posted: March 3, 2013 Filed under: ho tay, nghi tam, Pics, tay ho | Tags: art, ho tay, nghi tam, sculpture, tay ho Leave a comment »Nghi Tam at Tet – in glorious sunshine
Posted: February 3, 2013 Filed under: Hanoi, ho tay, nghi tam, Pics, tay ho, tet | Tags: flowers, Hanoi, ho tay, nghi tam, tay ho, tet Leave a comment »Full set is here.
Paint it White
Posted: October 25, 2012 Filed under: Hanoi, ho tay, nghi tam, Pics, tay ho | Tags: au co, Hanoi, nghi tam, vietnam Leave a comment »Chasing Pavements
Posted: October 1, 2012 Filed under: environment, Hanoi, ho tay, nghi tam, Reflections, tay ho | Tags: cafe, Hanoi, ho tay, nghi tam, pavements, sidewalks, tay ho 1 Comment »Pavements in Hanoi are not so much sidewalks as sideparks.
On visiting other countries I find myself suffering pavement envy. On a work trip to Taipei I was soon shaking my head in wonder at their wide boulevards. Imagine the strolling possibilities in the cool autumn and colder winter. In Hanoi you can never stroll. Instead you scamper, dodge, duck and weave, continually stepping up and down as you go.
This car in Nghi Tam doesn’t appear to move much – alongside it is another vehicle, essentially making the Nghi Tam pavements unusable. Beyond this, pavements are dumps for the assorted building materials required for the cyclical tearing down and building up of the neighbourhood. Up the hill and round the corner is a BMW garage that parks its entire fleet on the pavement opposite – seemingly without any trouble.
Meanwhile, when my wife’s cafe want to put out a couple of chairs and table in front of the shop, still leaving plenty of room for walkers, she’s liable to have a chair or two snatched by police. The interest in furniture from law enforcement is a strange one. I’ve been in a late night bar when police have come in and taken all the chairs. Everyone just carried on drinking standing up – as if it was the sitting down that was breaking the law.
Elsewhere pavements right around Westlake are broken up every three feet with trees – providing welcoming shade but less welcoming obstacles. To pass each one you have to step back down onto the road.
The car situation is only going to get worse but then so are all “situations”. This is an increasingly overloaded city, nothing is going to get better on its own. Seems like as a first step the Hanoi authorities need to sit down and actually work out the concept of pavements. When is a pavement not a pavement? When it’s a car park?
Once they’ve decide what they want pavements to actually accomplish that’s what they can start to enforce.










