Hanoians
worry about more deadly collapses of colonial houses
Nguyen Thi Kim
moves her arms along the wall as she slowly goes down the stairs that creak
every single step of her way.
She sighs in relief on reaching the ground.
The 56-year-old goes through this several times a day as
she lives on the second floor of an old villa in
There are many such villas in the city downtown where
hundreds live in constant fear. The buildings are not the responsibility of
any particular agency, and have deteriorated over the last century without
any maintenance.
Nearly 600 now belong to private users and the rest are
under government management.
The public houses were given to various state agencies
who either use them as offices or have redesigned them for their employees
and their families to use.
Some private owners have restored their houses though
without expert advice.
Kim said more than 50 people live in her villa, which is
in an alley along
They share the kitchen and bathrooms.
Tung, a man living on the ground floor of the villa,
said the place is so old that if one taps the wall lightly mortar falls off.
“It would be bad luck to say this, but if it collapses
there is nothing I can do but die.”
The concern has never been so real as a 110-year-old
villa also on Tran Hung Dao collapsed on September 22 after heavy rain,
killing two vendors at the nearby market.
People working inside the building felt shaken and ran
out after the collapse.
Without better management, the risk of more villas
collapsing is very real, architect Tran Huy Anh warned following the
incident.
Tran Bich Lan, who lives in another old villa in the
alley opposite, said she cannot sleep well at night since the incident.
Her villa shakes any time a large vehicle passes by on
the road, she said.
In many of the colonial houses, the concrete has worn
off at parts, exposing rusty iron frames.
“I have removed the ceiling fan since the roof has
become very weak,” a woman living in a house that is older than the one that
collapsed said.
A woman inside a house built by the French in 1888 on
Messy
French companies that built the houses in
Vietnamese experts have suggested that the governments should
take over the houses and restore them to preserve as relics.
A senior official at the city Department of Construction told
news website Dan Tri that the villa that just collapsed and many others of
its kind have never been examined for structural integrity.
Dr Nguyen Hong Thuc, director of the
But that value has not been well protected due to the lack of
regulations and the “mess” related to ownership, she said.
Anh also pointed to the “unclear” responsibility for managing
the houses.
He said all French houses were built using good materials and
techniques, but “they are basically abandoned and thus easily damaged.”
|
Thứ Sáu, 25 tháng 9, 2015
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét