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Houses in Ho Chi Minh City

  • 30 Colorful
    Unlike Hà Nội where most new houses have a very historicist decorative design, the new houses in Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC) are more modernist if not just utilitarian. And while the houses in Hà Nội are most often painted ochre or vermillion, there is a much greater use of other colors in HCMC. As in Hà Nội, most houses are "tube houses" in that they are very narrow but very long. Although I haven't confirmed this yet, it is said that these lots are narrow because property taxes are based on the width of the lot at the street line. In HCMC, I guess (without confirmation yet) that many of the new houses are designed by young architects trying out new ideas, and this is very good to see. This in contrast to the usual utilitarian modernist larger buildings in HCMC. These pictures can be viewed by clicking on the first or top picture in the album and then click "next" on each photo to proceed though the album in slide show fashion.
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27 July 2007

Back in San Francisco...

I am back in San Francisco for a month after 7 months in Ho Chi Minh City.  This being summertime, San Francisco is shrouded in fog until mid-day, and it is damp and cold.  Part of the big change in moving to HCMC was escaping to the heat, which I love after 30 years of the cold in San Francisco.

Another part of my personal burnout was my taking for granted the beauty and energy of San Francisco.  It has been good to move away for a year-and-a-half and then return to appreciate anew why San Francisco is such a special place, including its climate.  My neighborhood, Glen Park, has improved with two new restaurants opened in the village, with one replacing a seedy bar.  The undergrounding of utilities is finally completed on my street.

Downtown at lunchtime, the density of people rivals that of Ho Chi Minh City.  Of course the majority of the downtown workers don't live in San Francisco, but they add immensely to the energy of the city.  I noticed that the standard of dress has returned to suits and business casual rather than the jeans of the past few years.  In addition to being a financial center, San Francisco is the creative center for the adjacent Silicon Valley.  The blog capital of the world is here south of Market Street, which was made very clear when an afternoon power outage knocked the major blog services off the net for a couple of hours, including Technorati.

Returning to the USA is also a time to recharge my western tastes in food.  While in Saigon, we stick to Vietnamese or other Asian food, and we love the healthy fresh ingredients and tastes that characterize Vietnamese food.  But part of the antidote to burnout is to avoid staying in a rut for too long.  Although I don't miss western food while in Viet Nam, I do look forward to the return visits to the USA to do a change-up and give the VN food a break.  I keep a list of my favorite foods and restaurants, and I have been working my way down the list, starting with a western breakfast of pancakes, egss, and bacon, then a peanut butter and jelly sandwich for lunch, followed by pizza for dinner.  I will be moving on to hamburgers, steaks, cinnamon rolls, burritos and tacos.

This is also a good time to evaluate the antidote to burnout.  After a year-and-a-half in Ho Chi Minh City, the change has been very good for me, even if my business is not working out as hoped.  The key to change is to learn new things, which has been abundant for me as I learn more everyday about the real estate development business, building upon my 35-year career in architecture and project management.  I have also rekindled my old interests in urban design and planning, since Saigon is in the midst of a major rezoning and city vision project. I love living in HCMC.  What I am now learning, however, is the need for constant change-up between major changes.  It is important to "get out of town" regularly, eat varieties of food, and stay out of ruts.

This seems like common sense -- a prescription that everyone can follow, but I observe that people find it easier to stay in ruts.

09 December 2005

The new de Young Museum in San Francisco

I am trying to take advantage of my time in San Francisco to catch up on the benefits of the city I ignored for so long while working myself into burnout.  The new de Young fine arts museum was recently completed, but I had ignored visiting the old de Young prior to its forced closing after the Loma Prieta Earthquake in 1989.

The new de Young Museum was designed by the Swiss firm of Herzog & de Meuron, the  2001 Pritzker Prize-winning architects.  The Pritzker Prize is considered to be equivalent to a Nobel Prize.

One might think that a new building by such esteemed contemporary architects would be the kind of tour de force represented by the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain by by my favorite architect, Frank Gehry.
Bilbao
[Image by Mary Ann Sullivan's Digital Imaging Project of Bluffton University]

The new de Young Museum is essentially a two-story box with a too-short small tower, and the overall impact of the design is rather understated and certainly less flashy than contemporary museums like the Bilbao.  Given the context of this building in the Golden Gate Park though, this design is very successful because it fits so well into the trees of the park.
Front_view
The architectural impact of this design comes from the choice and use of a single material -- copper.
Tower
The entire building is sheathed in panels of copper that are each different in terms of texture or pattern.  These patterns range from embossed circles to perforations.  As the copper oxidizes over the years, the building will change over time and variations in each panel will continue to provide very rich contributions to the whole of the design.
Materials
The corner tower was a very controversial element of the design since neighbors felt that such high-rise structures are inappropriate in the park, but its color and texture helps it to fit in, and the compromised shortness of the tower missed an opportunity to provide a rare view out of the park.
Tower_fit
As shown in this view from the observation deck of the tower, the Golden Gate Bridge is barely seen.
View_1
The view down from the observation deck makes the rooftop of the museum a fifth "side" of the building, and the architects have paid careful attention to the roof so that it is as tightly designed as the ground view.
Rooftop
Although the building is a box, it is cut through with courtyards that form the galleries and public spaces, as well as tying the building to the nature around it.
Courtyard
A cafe is located at the end of one of these courtyards
Cafe
and features a structural tour de force in a canopy at the west end of the building.
West_end
But the most important contribution of the design of this building is to the art that it houses in the galleries.  Since the building is a box rather than an architectural form in itself, the galleries could be configured and detailed to concentrate attention on the artwork rather than the form of the galleries.
Gallery
I should be embarrassed to admit that I usually am not attracted to fine art museums other than those that feature modern art.  The surprise to me in visiting this museum was that I enjoyed the diversity of the artwork so much and was reminded once again that the arts of the past directly inform the arts of today and our own humanity, as shown in this one example of earthenware from western Mexico from sometime between 300 B.C. and 300 A.D.
Earthenware
The purpose of museums is to give us perspective of the ability of human beings to express themselves and their times through the arts, and this particular museum does this so well.