Showing posts with label Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Park. Show all posts

Thursday, January 27, 2011

HCMC to open tourism park

Bamboo park: Viet Nam At A Glance resembles a giant garden. Traditional flowers, together with bonsai, fruit and bamboo trees adorn HCM City's new tourism park. — File Photo

Bamboo park: Viet Nam At A Glance resembles a giant garden. Traditional flowers, together with bonsai, fruit and bamboo trees adorn HCM City's new tourism park. — File Photo

HCM CITY — A tourism park with a strong cultural theme is being built in time for Tet (lunar New Year) in HCM City's suburban Cu Chi District.

Viet Nam At A Glance, located off Bo Cap (Scorpion) pier in An Phu Commune, resembles a giant garden with traditional varieties of flowers, bonsai, and fruit and bamboo trees of various kinds and sizes.

But designers and carpenters worked hard to create a 22.5-ha village that depicts the cultural and daily aspects of the life of people in various regions of the country.

It has hundreds of model houses, rickshaws, and everyday objects made of bamboo, wood, and clumps of rice straw and grass.

Artisans from as far-flung areas as Cao Bang make traditional dishes, cakes, liquor, and handicrafts, which are both displayed and sold.

There is a playground for traditional games that takes older people back to their childhood when they themselves played those games.

Music and dance and food related to ethnic groups can be seen at several spots around the park.

"We have worked hard with our suppliers, including farms, agricultural companies, and tourist agencies, to make our park one of the city's biggest and best cultural and entertainment centres," Tran Thi Tuyet Nga, a member of the park's managing board, said.

"Through its unique products, we hope visitors will discover and enjoy slices of Viet Nam's history, culture, and lifestyle in different regions.

"I'm sure both local and foreign photographers and artists will find inspiration here."

She and her 200-strong staff hope to welcome 40,000-50,000 visitors during the Tet holidays in the first week of February.

Henry Nguyen Lam, a Vietnamese-American businessman who is visiting the country for Tet, says: "My family and I will tour Cu Chi and visit Viet Nam At A Glance."

Entry tickets cost VND50,000 to 95,000 and are available at the venue. They can also be booked at 08 2218 1465.

The park's website at http://www.motthoangvietnam.vn offers more information. — VNS

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Monday, January 24, 2011

HCM City's children set for 10 new amusement parks

Floating around: Children at HCM City's Dai Nam amusement park. The city's authorities plan to build 10 new amusement parks and three cultural centres for children during the next two years. — VNS File Photo

Floating around: Children at HCM City's Dai Nam amusement park. The city's authorities plan to build 10 new amusement parks and three cultural centres for children during the next two years. — VNS File Photo

HCM CITY — The HCM City People's Committee is giving priority to building 10 amusement parks and three cultural centres for children this year.

A centre each will be built in Tan Phu, Hoc Mon and Binh Chanh districts this year while the amusement parks will be completed next year. Work on all of them will begin this year.

The 10 will be modelled on the Khanh Hoi Children's Entertainment Area in District 4, a free, 13,000sq.m facility that attracts 1,500-2,000 children every day.

One each will be built in the Can Thanh Town Park in Can Gio District, Phu Lam Park in District 6, Le Thi Rieng Park in District 10, the Youth Activity Centre in Nha Be District, the Binh Chanh Commune Cultural Park in Binh Chanh District, with the districts funding them.

The City Department of Transport will build four others at Gia Dinh Park in Go Vap District and Tao Dan Park, 23/9 Park, and Le Van Tam Park in District 1.

The city Department of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs will build the last one at the Youth Education and Vocational Training Centre.

The People's Committee has also ordered construction of the Rach Chiec Physical Training and Sport Complex, the City Museum, the symphony and opera theatre, and the City Circus in the Thu Thiem New Urban Area in District 2.

Around 1.7 million children aged below 16 live in the city but there are few amusement and entertainment venues for them. — VNS

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Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Tet Flower Festival on Jan 28

HCM CITY — Local authorities are gearing up for the annual Spring Flower Festival at Tao Dan Park in HCM City as the Lunar New Year (Tet) holiday approaches.

The event will begin on January 28 and end on February 8 (the sixth day of the lunar calendar's first month).

More than 8,000 indigenous and foreign flowers, ornamental fish, bonsai plants and trees will be featured at the festival. They will be provided by florists, farms, handicraft villages and business people involved in agriculture, according to Tran Thien Ha, director of the HCM City Green Tree and Park Company, a member of the festival's organising board.

Well-known handicraft villages and farms in HCM City, Ha Noi and the provinces of Binh Duong, Ben Tre, Tien Giang, Vinh Long and Lam Dong will introduce their products at the festival.

In addition to the flower displays and sales, the event will include musical and dance performances, as well as cultural exhibits such as traditional food festivals and painting displays. The festival's themes highlight the 11th Congress of the Viet Nam Communist Party, which opens today in Ha Noi.

The opening ceremony will include three music and song programmes in praise of the Party and President Ho Chi Minh, which feature dozens of veterans and young performers.

The show titled Sac Hoa Dang Dang-Dang Bac (Flowers for the Party and Uncle Ho) will highlight revolutionary music.

Designed to feel like a colourful garden, Tao Dan Park will attract children and young people who find inspiration in nature.

Visitors will participate in a variety of street shows featuring folk art and games staged by hundreds of puppet and circus performers, which begin at 8pm every night.

Organisers said they have received help and support from the city People's Committee and other offices and organisations. — VNS

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Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Dining out at Opera Restaurant

The Opera Terrace at the Park Hyatt Hotel Saigon - Photo: Courtesy of the Park Hyatt Hotel Saigon
Located at the Park Hyatt Hotel Saigon’s lobby level, overlooking the elegant City Opera House, the Opera Restaurant is an ideal dining venue for local and international guests in town.

Open from 6 a.m. until 1 a.m. (last order at 11.30 p.m.), the all-day-dining restaurant serves an Italian-inspired breakfast in the morning, and offers fresh pasta, pizza from a wood-burning oven and other home-made dishes for lunch and dinner. In addition, Opera features a bar featuring the hotel’s signature drinks and a large floor-to-ceiling wine library with more than 1,500 bottles of fine Italian wines from Toscana, Veneto, Sicilia and Umbria.

To make sure all the dishes are authentic, Italian Chef Michele Gulizzi from Palermo, Sicily, gives the culinary direction for this exciting dining venue.

From December 1, the Opera Terrace offers its special free flow of white, red wines and beer with the choice of Nero d’Avola La Mura, Sicilia (Red Wine ), Grillo La Mura, Sicilia (White Wine) and draught Tiger beer. Priced at VND320,000 per person. Available from Monday through Friday, from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.

For more information and reservations, call 08 3520 2357 or email opera.saiph@hyatt.com.

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Wednesday, December 8, 2010

For Children’s Sake

hen first opened to the public in 2006, it was covered with a top layer of pure white sand reminiscent of a desolate beach somewhere in central Vietnam. Four years later, the white sand has turned grey and some of the equipment has been broken down. Despite the degradation, that public playground under the foliage of Tao Dan Park remained a favorite place for toddlers and young children in the neighborhood.

At the time, Lever Vietnam under Unilever Vietnam offered to build a children’s playground at Tao Dan Park at its own expense. After the construction, the playground would be transferred to the park’s authorities. The initiative was embraced by both the then Department of Communications and Transport, to which Tao Dan Park was an affiliate, and the Department of Culture and Information. Not long afterward, on the left side of Truong Dinh Street toward the gate to Nguyen Thi Minh Khai Street emerged a beautiful playground, one of the best in town even by today’s standards.

Ever since, every week, especially on the weekend, hundreds of children accompanied by their parents flocked to the playground to frolic, play seek-and-hide, tease and do whatever they want to please themselves.

But on Friday September 29, when children and parents arrived, they were unexpectedly denied access to their favorite playground. In line with a petition of the Police of District 1, the site was shut down. According to local police sources, since its inauguration in 2006, 10 incidents caused by hoodlums had taken place on site, four of which had been handled as criminal offenses. In response, authorities from the HCM City Department of Transportation (the successor of the Department of Communications and Transport) sent an urgent letter to the Company of Parks and Green Trees which manages Tao Dan Park to instruct the latter to temporarily close the playground at the request of the district police.

Covered by the local press, the closure of the playground soon provoked a public outcry. Speaking to Thanh Nien (Young Adults) newspaper on September 30, six days after the shutdown, Nguyen Van Minh, vice chairman of the Cultural-Social Committee of the HCM City People’s Council, said, “The decision made by the Department of Transportation to close the children’s playground at Tao Dan Park isn’t a good one because at this moment we should commit more investment so that we can have many other similar playgrounds.”

What Minh said can be cross-referred to the current situation of Vietnamese children. Recent statistics show that the rate of crime among Vietnamese teenagers is on the rise. Also, the percentage of psychological disorders among Vietnamese children is high, at 22% as polls have indicated. The same rate is between 11% and 13% in Japan and the United States, and is 11% in China.

Some local experts have pointed the finger of suspicion at a lack of healthy playgrounds for children as a cause to the high rate of crime among young citizens. Fortunately, this time, the municipal authorities have taken side with the children. In mid-October, the HCM City People’s Council hosted a meeting to discuss specially to tackle the issue. “The city government has not only reversed the decision to close the playground but also committed to expanding the site,” Hua Ngoc Thuan, vice mayor of HCM City told delegates at the meeting. Three weeks following the closure of the children’s playground at Tao Dan Park, it was opened to the public again.

HCM City is the official residence of some 1.7 million children and adolescents. But speakers at the meeting agreed that good facilities—for instance children’s playgrounds—catering to their recreational need remain too modest. District 4 is currently the only district to have a public children’s playground of scale where children can engage in physical or mental games free of charge. On a total area of 14,000 square meters, the Khanh Hoi Park in District 4 has attracted thousands of visitors a week, offering them about 20 outdoor and indoor games. Guests to the children’s park are not only residents of District 4 but also those from other quarters. And the downside: Commissioned in 2009, Khanh Hoi Park is now overloaded with visitors.

While a lack of space can be used as a pretext for inadequate children’s playgrounds, sections of green parks are currently used for other purposes. For instance, 400 square meters of Tao Dan Park has been leased to a restaurant and the reclamation of this area has been discussed for 18 years through several terms of city leaders to no avail, reported Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper.

Vice mayor Hua Ngoc Thuan has asked related authorities to finalize land leasing contracts at public parks so that more space can be used for children’s recreational facilities. Authorities have pledged to build 10 children’s playgrounds at parks across the city.

In the immediate future, four children’s playgrounds will be built or expanded in four parks. At Tao Dan Park, a playground will be built on 1,200 square meters part of which is reclaimed from a restaurant. On the site, physical games will be available in addition to fun brain games plus a library.

Meanwhile, the existing children playground at Le Van Tam Park will be expanded and several free games added. Similarly, at Hai Muoi Ba Thang Chin Park, the 2,500-square-meter water music area will be built into a water puppet stage for children. Gia Dinh Park’s current 4,000-square-meter playground is likely to be broadened to 10,000 square meters where children’s physical games, sports and other recreational activities are all available.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Visitors flock to tourism fest

Visitors at the photograph exhibition –

Visitors at the photograph exhibition – "Ha Noi 1,000 Years Old" – at the Temple of Literature view some of the 1,000 photos on display. — VNS Photo Viet Thanh

HA NOI — Thousands of visitors attended the opening day of the International Tourism Festival in the Bao Son Paradise Theme Park on Saturday.

The festival features a wide range of cultural and tourism information about countries on five continents. International tourism companies and industry representatives from many countries have come to the festival to display their destinations and services such as Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, China, Bangladesh, Brazil, Egypt and Japan.

Vietnamese tourism businesses are taking this opportunity to present their tourism services at more than 90 booths, while Ha Noi agents are introducing the city's potential at 180 separate booths.

Hout Sinuon, deputy director of the Cambodian Statistics and Tourism Information Department, said many festival attendees had already visited his booth.

"We are here to promote our culture and tourist attractions," he said. "We think we will successfully lure tourists to Cambodia."

An international workshop today will focus on practical benefits of co-operation opportunities, experience exchange, tourism development and joint-venture tourist projects.

Check it out: Visitors are introduced to speciality and tourism services at a Lao booth. — VNS Photo Minh Thu

Check it out: Visitors are introduced to speciality and tourism services at a Lao booth. — VNS Photo Minh Thu

The Bao Son Paradise Theme Park is the biggest entertainment and tourism complex in the city. Opened to the public last year, the park was developed to quench the local population's thirst for entertainment and relaxation.

The 20ha entertainment and tourism complex consists of four main areas: traditional craft villages of Viet Nam, a replica of Ha Noi's old quarter, an eco-tourism area and a culinary section offering cuisine from all corners of Viet Nam.

Many cultural and art activities are being organised throughout the park during the four-day festival.

A stage has been set up at the park's gate to feature international music and a carnival. Visitors can also enjoy listening to traditional Vietnamese music such as cheo (traditional opera), folk singing from the central region, chau van (spiritual music), quan ho (love duets) and ca tru (ceremonial singing) at the village hall in the traditional craft village area. Two puppetry performances will be held every day during the festival.

Visitors will have the chance to join folk games such as walking on stilts, bamboo swinging, human chess and throwing a ball through a ring at the ethnic village's replica of a Thai stilt house.

The park's old quarter area brings back Ha Noi's past life through calligraphy demonstrations, xam (blind blusker) singing, to he (toy figurines) making and street vendors.

"We're trying to offer as many traditional Vietnamese art performances as possible," says Nguyen Truong Son, director of Bao Son Group, owner of the park. "The performances will change everyday during the four day exhibition so visitors will be able to enjoy something different each day."

"With the theme Thang Long-Ha Noi, Convergence of 1,000 Years, this will be the biggest event held to celebrate the 1,000th anniversary of the capital, and the 50th anniversary of the Ha Noi Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism's tourism industry," said Mai Tien Dung, deputy director of the department.

"The International Tourism Festival is a key National Tourism Year activity and aims to introduce and honour the cultural and historical values of the capital. This event will also help promote Viet Nam's tourism products and services in the international market," he said.

The park and Thang Long Road, where the park is located, were built to mark the city's millennium.

The opening ceremony for the Cong Nhan (Workers) Theatre was another cultural highlight that took place on Saturday in the capital.

Chairwoman of the city's People Council, Ngo Thi Doan Thanh, and vice chairman of the People's Committee Phi Thai Binh attended the ceremony.

Located at 42 Trang Tien Street, the theatre was first built in 1917 and was used as a cinema. After the liberation of the city from the French in 1954, the name of the theatre was changed to its current name.

The theatre's renovation began in October 2007. The three-storey theatre, which includes a 500-seat auditorium and a well-equipped stage, is now ready to host a variety of different events.

The theatre's opening is helping celebrate the city's grand anniversary.

On the same day, a collection of 94 valuable books about Thang Long-Ha Noi were unveiled at the National Library in the capital.

A display showcasing documents about the capital city is also open to the public at the library.

Nguyen Dang Duc Bao's win in the men's 8,750m event at the Ha Noi Moi newspaper's Run for Peace around Hoan Kiem Lake helped his Khanh Hoa team secure the team title yesterday in Ha Noi.

Bao, who has been the runner to beat during the past several years, stole the triumph from Nguyen Van Lai from the Military team in the last hundreds metres.

Lai failed to defend his title and finished second, followed by Bui The Anh from the Border Guard team.

The Border Guard surpassed the Military to take second place in the team event.

On the women's side, Thanh Hoa sprinter Nguyen Thi Phuong won the gold medal in the 5,250m event. Nguyen Dang Thanh Thuy, who is Bao's younger sister, came in second while Nguyen Thi Huong from Thai Binh finished third.

Phuong's top place failed to help her Thanh Hoa team finish in the top three. The team title went to Khanh Hoa, with Thai Binh taking second and Quang Ninh finishing third.

Khanh Hoa easily won the overall title at the event.

Apart from the events for professionals, the running contest also had categories for amateurs.

The annual event marks the 56th anniversary of Ha Noi's liberation (October 10) and the 1,000th anniversary of the founding of the capital. — VNS

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Friday, August 27, 2010

Numerous events to mark Hanoi’s 1000th birthday

thanh thang long
Hanoi's Thang Long imperial citadel, a UNESCO’s World Heritage site

Numerous art and cultural activities have been held in Hanoi to celebrate the capital city’s millennium birthday on October 10.

The Thang Long Art Ornamental Plant Association opened two exhibitions of ornamental trees and stones at Ly Thai To and Indira Gandhi parks in Hanoi Wednesday.

At Ly Thai To Park, near Hoan Kiem lake, in central Hanoi, over 550 ornamental trees of various species and nearly 100 works of art made of stone are on display.

Many of them have been kept and cared for by their families over many generations.

The exhibition at Ly Thai To Park will run until September 20 and the one in Indira Gandhi Park will close on Oct. 30.

According to Luu Minh Tri, President of the Thang Long Art Ornamental Plant Association, a larger exhibition will be held at the Hanoi Museum from September 25-October 30.

Twelve groups of puppeteers from overseas will join five Vietnamese groups to take part in the second International Puppetry Festival in Hanoi from September 4-9.

Of the 12 foreign groups, the puppeteers from Egypt, Israel and Cuba are visiting Vietnam for the first time.

The festival’s opening ceremony will be held at the Hanoi Opera House and the winner of the gold cup will also receive an award of US$1,000.

Later, from October 6-11, the Ha Thanh Culinary Festival will be held at Ho Tay (West Lake) Park as one of the major activities to mark the city’s birthday.

The festival will attract tourist and travel agencies from all 63 cities and provinces across the country as well as foreign embassies and enterprises in Vietnam.

The festival will take place on a 8ha site with separate areas for cuisine, Hanoian culture and folk games.

There will be 130 stalls selling special dishes from every part of Vietnam, with a special focus on traditional Hanoian dishes.

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