The Borneo Post

Close quarters: Vietnam’s downtown dwellers cling to tiny plots

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HO CHI MINH CITY: Pham Quoc Cong walks two kilometres to use the bathroom because his 2.2 meters-squared house isn’t big enough to have one.

But, he says, it’s a price worth paying to be able to live on a prized plot in downtown Ho Chi Minh City where he can readily find work.

He lives with six relatives in a closet- sized space bursting with clothing, toys, a fridge, a bunk bed, a rice cooker, papers, groceries, toilet paper and other household items.

That leaves little room for sleeping so he spends most nights outdoors on a cardboard-lined lounge chair, which can be tricky in bad weather.

“It’s really hard during the rainy season to find a dry place. If I can’t, I just sleep standing up the whole night,” said the 49-year- old manual labourer who has lived in the one-room home since 1975.

The ‘ micro-house’ dwellings are dotted throughout Vietnam’s bustling southern hub, occupied by families clinging to tiny plots of land in a city developing at breakneck pace.

Tucked away in winding alleys, nestled under new condo developmen­ts or sandwiched between street food stalls and shops, they are easily missed by the unattentiv­e passerby.

But Cong says his home in the vibrant District 3 neighbourh­ood could sell for as much as US$ 22,000 thanks to rising land prices.

Even so, like many others living in micro-houses, he says he wouldn’t swap his prime location for a few extra metres of space.

“We’re used to this area. If we move elsewhere we can’t do business,” said Cong, whose sisters and niece make a living as vendors in the city centre.

Many of the mini-homes sprung up as larger housing plots that were whittled down by new, wider roads and other developmen­ts in the city.

Some may have started out on rice paddies during the period of French rule and ended up as squatter land, said Mel Schenck, an American who is writing a book about modernist architectu­re in Ho Chi Minh City.

There is no data on how many micro-houses exist today, and Schenck says they may eventually disappear from the rapidly transformi­ng city.

“There’s constant change going on, and I think in the long term that’s a good thing, so if some of these disappear then that’s what happens,” he told AFP, while acknowledg­ing their ‘picturesqu­e value’.

Land disputes are routine in the city, with downtown dwellers accusing city officials of underpayin­g for plots that are then sold on to developers for hefty sums.

That worries Nguyen Van Truong, who lives with five relatives in his 6.7- square-metre plot underneath a luxury highrise condo. — AFP

 ??  ?? Ngoc and her husband Duc prepare for dinner in their two-square-meter house in Ho Chi Minh City. — AFP photo
Ngoc and her husband Duc prepare for dinner in their two-square-meter house in Ho Chi Minh City. — AFP photo

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