Hanoi
retail is going ‘open air’ by 2020
Shoppers in Hanoi can expect to see more open-air
lifestyle centres than closed-in, windowless malls, if a proposed
redevelopment plan for the capital city is approved, says the Hanoi
Department of Industry and Commerce.
The ambitious plans for the revamp
includes demolishing and renovating many of the existing buildings and
constructing an expansive network of open air walkable retail plaza centres
by 2020, said Tran Thi Phuong Lan, vice director of the Department.
Currently, the city has roughly 133
supercentres, 27 large malls, with hundreds of convenience stores and
traditional open air markets scattered throughout the metropolitan area, said
Mr Lan.
In the last five years, eight new
modern shopping malls anchored by international foreign brands such as Lotte
and AEON out of Japan and the Republic of Korea have sprung up in the city
suburbs.
However,
according to the results of a recent study commissioned by the Department
most respondents think the shopping centres are too widely distributed and
want them more highly concentrated.
They also think shopping at the
newer shopping centres is much too expensive, they provide low quality
services, create innumerable traffic problems and result in an inordinate
amount of air pollution, said Mr Lan.
Particularly, customers are
dissatisfied with the underground parking areas at many of the shopping
centres, where they are exposed to dangerously high levels of air pollution.
The respondents said they wanted the
centres repositioned as open-air, walkable retail plazas that are more
pedestrian-friendly shopping areas offering more a ‘open air main street’
experience.
Most importantly, however, said the
Mr Lan, respondents said they want the city to build shopping centres more
along the lines of traditional markets, where vendors can both buy and sell
their wares.
They
believe open air markets are not only less expensive, but provide vegetables
and other produce that is much fresher and tastier than that provided in the
larger centres that is often overpriced and of dubious quality and origin.
The markets also provide for a much
more diverse selection of goods, said Mr Lan, and the active streetscapes are
inviting to shoppers and engage the community with street-entry stores and
restaurants.
The plans for the new open air infrastructure
have yet to be formally finalized, but could go up for approval in the near
future. Developers would then need to be found with the aim of work
starting by the end of the year.
Mr Lan told the media the plan was
to build something with a ‘Hanoi flavour’ rather than just copying
developments in other cities.
The large empty supermarkets in
shopping malls and supercentres with their poorly planned underground parking
could be a thing of the past in Hanoi if redevelopment plans come to
fruition.
Mr Lan said: "The regeneration
of the capital city of Hanoi is a key priority not just for the Department
but for the people of Vietnam as a whole.”
“A new, vibrant Hanoi is of benefit
not just to the residents and businesses of the capital city, but to people
across Vietnam.”
"We want to develop a thriving,
vibrant and viable city. We don't want to copy from elsewhere but we do want
to learn from other successful developments.”
"Our
new city centre needs to be unique and retain a special Hanoi identity and
character that cannot be found anywhere else around the globe."
VOV
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Thứ Bảy, 14 tháng 5, 2016
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