VietNamNet Bridge - After working in broadcast journalism for a decade in Australia, Michael Turtle left Sydney to travel the world and write about his discoveries, Hoi An ancient town in central Vietnam is one of them. Below is his article about Hoi An.

Hoi An was designed as a trading hub – and that’s what it did well between the 15th and 19th centuries. It was a port city, set on a river that helped the flow of commerce through Asia, then Europe, then even further afield. It was where people from across the region and across the world came to buy, to sell, to haggle, to rip off and be ripped off.

There’s something comforting about seeing that Hoi An is still being used the way it was designed. And there’s also something a bit disconcerting.

Everything here is about commerce. Almost every single building is a shop, a restaurant, a hotel, a bar, a tour agency. I notice it when I am taking some photos and looking for a facade without signage – it’s really difficult to find. Instead I just find more rickshaw drivers. “You want ride?”

But, as I said, that’s what this city is about, right? It has a long history of business. Does it matter that the business is now tourism, rather than spices or textiles? In some ways, no. What has happened in Hoi An can be seen as an organic evolution.

During the 19th century, the trade through this region declined and businesses began to leave the city. Unlike other ports in Asia, which modernised and underwent large scale developments, Hoi An was abandoned from a commercial perspective. It meant that nobody demolished the original houses to build bigger warehouses and suburbs weren’t reclaimed for high-tech port equipment. The beautiful buildings were effectively preserved.

It’s these buildings which have now led to the city’s economic recovery. They sit together tightly on both sides of narrow streets that cross each other in a grid formation. They are timber framed with brick or wooden walls. There are clearly Chinese and Japanese influences in many of the designs – particularly the roofs. But there are also signs of the cultural symbols that European traders brought with them over the years.

It makes Hoi An feel like a magical place. The consistency in the architecture, the motifs, even the colour – it’s as though someone has created the central part of the city as a theme park. But you know that it’s real, it’s authentic, and it’s historic. There are 1,107 buildings in the town that have been protected by heritage listing.

And that’s why the tourists come here and that’s why the businesses are here as well.

Don’t let all of this taint your view of Hoi An, though. It is a special place that gets more beautiful by the day as you start to notice the detail and discover new streets with different perspectives. There is plenty to do: from cooking classes to boat tours, plus the beach nearby with its inviting waters and seafood restaurants.

Even I, who you might be thinking by now has become a little cynical, get a rush of wonder the first night when I see all the lamps around the river lit up in a rainbow of colours, as boats glide silently beneath bridges and the buildings glow along the alleys.

The decline of industry saved Hoi An in the 19th century and now the rise of another has saved it again. For now.

 


Khách Tây nói về cảm xúc bối rối khi đến Hội An  

 
Khách Tây nói về cảm xúc bối rối khi đến Hội An  

 
Khách Tây nói về cảm xúc bối rối khi đến Hội An  

 
Khách Tây nói về cảm xúc bối rối khi đến Hội An  

 
Khách Tây nói về cảm xúc bối rối khi đến Hội An  

 
Khách Tây nói về cảm xúc bối rối khi đến Hội An  

 
Khách Tây nói về cảm xúc bối rối khi đến Hội An  

 
Khách Tây nói về cảm xúc bối rối khi đến Hội An  

Photo: Michael Turtle

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