Danang-where people feel most at home

Danang’s amazing transformation from an abandoned US military station in 1975 to the most liveable city in the country hosting the APEC 2017 summit is a story that goes back centuries.

Vietnamese-French artist Vu Trong Thuan has been around, seen the world.

After living for 32 years in France, the Haiphong native decided to return to Vietnam in 1999. He spent five years in HCM City, where he grew up as a child, and seven years in Hanoi.

But after a visit to Danang, he decided that he would spend the rest of his life in the central city. He bought a house and opened a gallery, the La Tour Eiffel Studio, on the banks of the Han River.

Thuan, 77, works on lacquer, but uses styrofoam “creatively” instead of wood.

“I was struck by the hospitality and friendliness of people as I first walked on the streets of Danang. I was a stranger, but people were very helpful, even if they were busy doing something else.”

“I decided to retire here. My house and gallery are a rendezvous for new friends in the city, and my wish is to give all my art treasures to the younger generation, including my work.”

The artist is one of hundreds of thousands of people who’ve moved here or invested in holiday or retirement homes.

The central city’s emergence as the most well developed urbanized location in the country is a remarkable story of rising from the ashes of the American War. The place where US combat troops landed first, it was an abandoned US military station when the war ended in 1975.

Today, the city stands at a political and socioeconomic junction of great strategic significance. Situated at the east end of the East-West Economic Corridor linking Laos, Thailand, Myanmar and Vietnam, the city is set to be a cultural, trade and investment hub in central Vietnam as well as the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

After the country’s reunification in 1975, a merger formed the Quang Nam-Danang province, but in 1997 they were separated into Danang City and Quang Nam Province, with the former becoming one of the five centrally-administered cities alongside Hanoi, HCM City, Can Tho and Haiphong.

New port, centuries ago

Danang, located near the Han River Estuary, emerged as a new port in the late 18th and early 19th centuries after the then major trading port of Hoi An began to silt up between the 15th and 18th centuries.

The city still preserves the Dien Hai Citadel, built as a military outpost in 1813 during King Gia Long’s reign near the mouth of the Han River. It controlled access to Danang port and served as an important defence position. The citadel still has a moat and several cannons.

A collection of 11 cannons, cast between 1802 and 1860, were unearthed at the Dien Hai Citadel between 1979 and 2008. They are linked to Nguyen Tri Phuong (1800-1873), a famous general who commanded an army fighting French-Spanish coalition forces in 1858-60.

The Hai Van Gate, situated on the top of the Hai Van Pass, is a complex of brick-built control towers dating back to the 13th century, and octagonal bunkers from the French colonial period. It was once the border between Dai Viet (the Great Viet, now Vietnam) and the Champa Kingdom, which ruled the central region between the fourth and 13th centuries.

In the 15th century under the reign of King Le Thanh Tong, the region of Quang Nam stretched from Hai Van Pass in Danang to what is now Phu Yen Province. It then narrowed from the pass to Doc Soi in Nui Thanh District (Quang Nam Province), and Danang became an entrance to Quang Nam from the Hai Van Pass during the reign of King Minh Mang of the Nguyen Dynasty in 1832.

The Hai Van Pass, which was part of the two provinces of O (Quang Tri province now) and Ly (Thua Thien-Hue), became part of the Great Viet after Champa King Jaya Sinhavarman III presented them to Great Viet as his wedding gift when he married Princess Huyen Tran, daughter of King Tran Nhan Tong.

Archaeologist Pham Van Trieu of the Vietnam Archaeology Institute said Danang was an intersection of different layers of cultures dating back at least 3,000 years.

He said stone tools and ceramic pieces found from excavations in Danang showed that the pre-Sa Huynh Culture and existed in the city, and that there were exchanges between people from Dai Viet (Great Viet, or now Vietnam) and people in the Champa Kingdom.

Many Cham tower ruins have been found in rural Danang.

“We have verified that the main Cham tower was built in the 10th century,” said another archaeologist, Nguyen Chieu.

“We found various collapsed Cham towers around the city. The towers were built to honour the Champa kings. The kingdom ruled in the central coastal region between the fourth and 13th centuries. Many towers remain to be discovered,” Chieu said.

He said the French had partially excavated some towers 100 years ago and that some of the stone statues and other relics found then are on display at the Cham Sculpture Museum in the city’s downtown area.

Vo Van Thang, director of the museum, said it was home to nearly 3,000 precious sandstone, terracotta and bronze sculptures dating back to the 12th and 15th centuries.

He said the museum was still the most visited place in Danang-welcoming more than 200,000 visitors annually.

Cultural confluence

Writer Thai Ba Loi, 72, said Danang carries a mixture of Dai Viet, Champa and pre-Sa Huynh cultures.

“Danang and Quang Nam were built on the foundation of the pre-Sa Huynh Culture (3,000 BC), and then the Champa Kingdom (between the fourth and 13th centuries). Danang was a favourite settlement for fishermen and people from coastal Thanh Hoa and Nghe An provinces in their southward move under the reign of King Le Thanh Tong,” Loi said.

Loi’s 400-page novel, Minh Su (the Mastermind), which was written between 2004-2009, was awarded the Southeast Asian Writers Award by the Thai Royal Family in 2013. His novel describes the life of Lord Nguyen Hoang (1525-1613) who expanded the nation southwards movement eventually spanned two centuries under the oversight of 13 kings and nine lords.

Loi was born in 1945 in Quynh Luu District of Nghe An Province. He joined the Vietnam People’s Army during the anti-American War in 1971 and settled in Danang after the 1975 reunification.

The American War reflected a continuation of the strategic significance that Danang has had for centuries. It was the first Vietnamese defence site the French-Spanish coalition forces attacked in 1858-1860, starting a century-long colonial rule of the French in Vietnam. Danang was called Tourane Villa during the French colonial period.

Thus the city has always been a “crucial location for Vietnam in terms of economy, defence and international trade with its deep sea port, road and railway,” Loi said.

Building bridges

The separation from former Quang Nam-Danang to become one of five key cities under the central government allowed Danang to enter the most impressive development phase yet in its long history, using its strategic location to good effect.

At the heart of Danang’s unprecedented urbanization push are nine bridges built over the Han River to connect the city’s downtown and beach tourism destinations in Son Tra and Ngu Hanh Son districts, as well as the UNESCO-recognised Hoi An Town in Quang Nam Province.

The connectivity afforded by the bridges were further cemented by an extensive infrastructure upgrade that saw the city grow from only 360 streets in 1997 to more than 2,000 now.

Thousands of slums on the east side of the Han River bank were cleared for community space and entertainment, and homeless fishermen were resettled in apartments.

A vast, pristine beach, once used by fishing boats in Son Tra and Thanh Khe districts to dock at night, has now become a major tourist attraction.

In the last 20 years, the number of beach resorts and hotels has increased from 61 to nearly 600, and its accommodation capacity soared to 5.6 million tourists – 27 times as many as in 1997.

The Five ‘Nos’

The city was the first urban area in Vietnam to comprehensively carry out the Five Nos programme: no poverty or starvation; no illiteracy; no beggars; no drug users; and no murder and robbery.

The success of this campaign has contributed in no small measure to making the city the country’s most popular place to live in, and the resultant infrastructure construction boom has significantly boosted employment.

More than 3,300 apartments were built from 2008 to 2015, while 34,000 jobs were created, helping keep unemployment down to 4.9%.

Core sectors

The city’s master development plan for 2030-2050 focuses on tourism, hi-tech industry and hi-tech agriculture, particularly for organic farming as core sectors.

The Asia institute of City Management (AiCM), which had commissioned a year-long study on Danang, announced last year that the coastal city is the most liveable place in Vietnam.

Unlike the larger cities of Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City, which have much older infrastructure, Danang has reaped the advantage of starting afresh, according to the institute.

It plans to become a ‘smart and green’ city by 2030.

In 2013, the city became the first locality in the country to use Facebook for inviting public feedback. The Facebook page of the city’s urban management agency, which has nearly 17,000 members, invites and collects opinions from locals and tourists on environmental pollution and related violations.

The city’s Information and Communications Department says they have put 1,196 administrative procedures online, as 95% of public employees are computer savvy now.

In 2014, Danang took the application of e-government systems to a new level, installing a Metropolitan Area Network (MAN), wireless internet, data centre and a centre for human training and research on Information Technology (IT) applications.

In 2015, one-stop shops were introduced along with free wireless internet (wifi) services. The city aims to become a centre of hi-tech industries, tourism and service, an ASEAN logistics hub and a key dynamic city for development in the central region.

Welfare provider

Amidst its urbanisation drive, the city has also paid attention to marginalised sections of the society. More than 1,500 homeless people are being taken care of at social care centres, and 14,500 underprivileged people have been allocated accommodations and given financial support.

The city has also built more than 7,700 apartments for low-income residents and several hostels have been built to accommodate 6,000 students.

Danang is the first city in Vietnam to launch a non-profit hospital for cancer patients. The hospital operates with funding from the city budget and donations from businesses, individuals and NGOs. It provides free treatment for the poor, while costs for paying cancer patients are close to 25% less than State-owned hospitals.

Special feeling

Tourist Dao Hai, who spent four days in the city, is one of many who’ve been made to feel most welcome by the locals.

“I can sit for a morning coffee in a pavement café and easily make friends with local residents. I always get reasonable suggestions about the city’s landmarks, restaurants and other places from the local people,” he said.

“I wish to come back here on my next trip. Cheap and fresh seafood, the beautiful beaches and pagodas, interesting craft works and friendly people make this city one of my favourite places.”

Among several unique attractions in Danang is the annual International Fireworks Competition that has been held on the banks of the Han River since 2008. It has become a landmark event and a rendezvous for famous firework teams from all over the world.

The 4,439ha Son Tra Nature Reserve, home to about 1,300 endangered red-shanked douc langurs (Pygathrix nemaeus) that are only found in Vietnam and Laos, add to Danang’s natural allure. The reserve, just 10km from downtown Danang, is home to more than 1,000 plants and 370 animal species.

APEC boost

Nguyen Thi Hoai An, vice director of the city’s tourism promotion centre, said hosting the 2017 APEC Summit was an honour for Danang and Vietnam, and a “golden opportunity” to promote the city’s attractions worldwide.

“APEC will be a really good chance for Danang to introduce its potential as a destination for beach tourism, luxury resorts, and a favoured MICE (Meeting, Incentives, Conference and Exhibition) site,” An said.

“Local enterprises can meet with businesses from the group’s 21 member economies and seek partnerships, contributing to the development of all sectors,” she said.

Home at last

Amidst all the APEC-related buzz, painter Thuan is at peace. He has found many friends in Danang, and his gallery has become a loving space for artists, painters and young, creative people.

“The Han River soothes me. I always wake up and whisper my love for it. The city and people treat me gently, and my art will be my special gift to the city, its beaches, its rivers and mountains.”

“For most people, their motherland is the final destination. It has been a long journey for me. I eventually returned to my home country to relive my childhood and meet friends. I was tired of travelling around the world.”

“Danang is my last destination.”

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