Ho Chi Minh City Hall

Ho Chi Minh City Hall
Ho Chi Minh City People's Council and
People's Committee Head Office
Trụ sở Hội đồng Nhân dân và Ủy ban Nhân dân
Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh
Ho Chi Minh City Hall looking over Nguyen Hue Boulevard square
Map
Former names
  • L'hôtel de ville ("municipal hall")
  • Tòa đô chánh Sài Gòn ("Saigon mayor's hall")
General information
Architectural styleBeaux-Arts
LocationHo Chi Minh City
Address86 Le Thanh Ton, District 1, Ho Chi Minh City, Viet Nam
Coordinates10°46′35″N 106°42′03″E / 10.7765°N 106.7009°E / 10.7765; 106.7009
Current tenantsHo Chi Minh City People's Committee
Groundbreaking1898; 126 years ago (1898)
Completed1908; 116 years ago (1908)
CostOriginal building: 1.5 million French francs (~US$36 million in 2024)
ClientFrench Indochina
Height98 feet (30 m)
Technical details
Floor countOriginal building: 2
Expanded buildings: 2-4
Grounds7,500 square metres (1.9 acres)
Design and construction
Architect(s)Fernand Gardè
Other designersFacade sculptors:
  • Louis - Lucien Ruffier (1898-1907)
  • Bonnet (1907-1909)

Ho Chi Minh City Hall, officially called the Ho Chi Minh City People's Council and People's Committee Head Office (Vietnamese: Trụ sở Hội đồng Nhân dân và Ủy ban Nhân dân Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh), is the city hall of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. It is located in District 1 of Ho Chi Minh City downtown, bounded by Pasteur, Lý Tự Trọng, Đồng Khởi, and Lê Thánh Tôn streets, with its front facade facing Nguyễn Huệ Boulevard square. The building houses the office of the city's Chairman of the People's Committee, Ho Chi Minh City People's Council and various city government departments including Transportation, Natural Resources & Environment, Industry & Trade and Home Affairs within the block.[1]

The building served as an administrative house for past governments during French colonial period and Vietnam War. Ho Chi Minh City Hall is now Vietnam's National Heritage Site and is open for public at the last weekend of a month.[2]

History

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After victories over conquests in Southern Vietnam, in 1870, the French drafted a plan to build an office for municipal council of Saigon at Kinh Lớn ("Big Canal"). However, the area was too muddy to lay a foundation hence halting the project. Until 1898, after the canal was covered to be made into Charner Boulevard, the French finally broke ground for the building. 1.5 million francs was approved for the project.[1] The building was a difficult project that took 11 years to finish.

The building was opened in 1909 by the French Indochina governors-general to celebrate 50 years of French presense in Saigon. The building was named L'hôtel de ville ("Municipal Hall"), while the Vietnamese locals generally called it Dinh xã Tây ('French municipal palace') or Dinh đốc lý or ('mayor's palace').

During the Vietnam War, the building was used by the city of Saigon government under South Vietnam and was renamed Tòa đô chánh Sài Gòn or Tòa đô sảnh ('Saigon mayor's hall').

Since the communists’ conquest of Saigon in 1975, the building has housed the Ho Chi Minh City People's Committee and Ho Chi Minh City People's Council. The building was renamed as it is now.

On April 29 and 30, 2023, to celebrate the Reunification Day, the building was opened to public for the first time.[3]

Architecture

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The grand hallway
Ho Chi Minh City Hall at night

The building originally comprised a grand hall with a clock tower upon it and 2 single story blocks on the left and right wing, streching from Pellerin Street to Catinat Street (now Pasteur Street and Đồng Khởi Street).

Exterior

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Directed by architect Fernand Gardè, the hall design took inspiration from the town hall of Paris and resembles the bell towers of northern France - a rising point-shaped tower accompanied by two adequate symmetrical attic towers and shorter but long blocks on the sides. The center tower includes a clock and at its peak a flag pole. Another storey was then built on top of the blocks in the 1940s.[1]

The design of the building is a fusion of multiple classical architectural streams like Renaissance, Baroque and Beaux-Arts, as seen on its with Baroque and Rococco decoration, Art Noveau iron doors, Corinthian columns and domic entrances. The entire front facade is sculptures of wreaths, ylang ylangs and men in Phrygian cap, reflecting the architecture of the French Third Republic. With so many inspirations taken from, the building was deemed by some "a woman with too much jewelry".[4]

The sculptures on the façade

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On the facade of the building, three sculptures of Marianne are placed in the middle of the pediments. She is the national personification of liberty, equality and fraternity of the French Republic.

The left sculpture

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The left sculpture shows the figure of Marianne seating on a podium. Her left hand is placed on a vase pouring water while her right hand holds a ship's rudder. She wears a laurel wreath on her head with some laurel decoration on the background. Below the figure is the wheat motif, a Caduceus, and a scythe.

The laurel wreath usually implies victory, while the Caduceus is Hermes's staff, often recalled as the symbol of commercial activity or negotiation. The appearance of the ship's rudder is believed to represent the strength of commerce and trading.[5] The sculpture is an indication of equality.[4]

The middle sculpture

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At the center of the facade, under the bell tower lies a sculpture depicting a godess and two children and two lions. The child on the left holds a long staff pointing at the female figure, while the boy on the right is stepping between two fierce lions. Marianne is most prominent with her taking-off-Phrygian-clothes posture, similar to the image of half-naked Marianne in the Liberty Leading the People painting. Her position also suggests that they bravely lead each other out of danger and wilderness.

The theme of this sculpture could be liberty as the woman is trying to escape from the mess and wild, with her eye looking up, fulfilled with hope and prospect. Out of the three sculptures, this one is also the most active form of Marianne, as she does not rest but moves vividly.[5] This central sculpture stands for fraternity.[4]

The right sculpture

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The right sculpture also shows Marianne resting position, building the counterpart to the left sculpture. However, she does not wear a laurel wreath like the left one but has a helmet and a Gallic rooster on her head. The Gallic rooster is complementary to Marrianne. While Marianne represents the state and their values, Gallic Rooster is the symbol of France as a nation. The sculpture's left hand is placed on a pelta shield, while her right hand holds a sword and leans on a vase pouring water. Under her feet are different weapons and remnants of a battle. Unlike other sculptures that hardly depict the environment, this sculpture captures a strong wind blowing Marianne's hair.

With the appearance of weapons, a shield, a sword, and a helmet, this sculpture features military strength. The woman's posture of sitting on war remnants also symbolizes France's pride in past victories on the battlefields that have brought about the peace.[5] The sculpture is a signification of liberty.[4]

Interior

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The main entrance consists of five consecutive domes, decorated with floral reliefs and every of its gates are stylized iron doors. Cars will enter the building from a nearby side gate. Another side gate at the address 86B Le Thanh Ton is the entrance for the city's Home Affairs Department. These side gates are adequately decorated with festoon motifs.

Entering the main entrance lies a grand hall and a staircase to the first floor. On the landing is a relief of two infants carrying the seal of Saigon. The walls and ceilings throughout the building are covered with paintings of the sky, ylang ylang leaves, Louis X-era laurel wreath and a variety of geometrical shapes, stained glass.[4]

Renovation and expansion

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In 1966, during Vietnam War, the building was expanded by adding 3 four-story blocks at the rear of the original building. They now house the offices of Ho Chi Minh City People's Committee and Home Affairs Department.

After the Vietnam War, the building was further expanded and renovated. In 1990, a two-story building is built on the rear left wing for security clearance affairs, and light poles were planted around the building. In 1998, another two-story block was built on the rear right wing. In 2005, the city of Lyon sponsored a project for a facade lighting system. During 2016-2017, a car and motorbike entrance to the underground floor and an internal park were built.

In 2018, the city introduced a new design for the rear blocks of the building, designed by Gensler.[6] The plan was then canceled to "avoid lavish spending".[7]

In 2023, the city approved a US$7.7 million renovation project.[8]

Early reception

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Upon opening, the City Hall waged irritation among indigenous citizens due to its high construction costs and design motifs. Local press even attacked the building with negative connotations as “grotesque” and “bad taste”. They regarded the architecture and its details as incomprehensible symbolic allegory. The references to a superior French Republic carved in the exterior did not seem to convey their underlying meanings to a common Vietnamese citizen.[9][10]

Culture

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Ho Chi Minh City Hall appeared in American film The Quiet American (1958).

References

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  1. ^ a b c Ho Chi Minh City Department of Planning and Architecture (1 Aug 2016). "Những tòa nhà lịch sử trong khuôn viên UBND Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh". Ho Chi Minh City Department of Planning and Architecture (in Vietnamese). Retrieved 2024-09-17.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ "The National-Level Architectural and Art Monument Tour of the People's Council and People's Committee of Ho Chi Minh City". Vibrant Ho Chi Minh City. 1 Feb 2024. Retrieved 2024-09-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ BTA (April 24, 2023). "Headquarters building of HCMC People's Committee open to tourists". Communist Party of Vietnam Online Newspaper.
  4. ^ a b c d e Lộc An (11 April 2019). "Kiến trúc đa văn hóa trong công trình 110 năm tuổi của Sài Gòn". VNExpress (in Vietnamese). Retrieved 2024-09-17.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ a b c Lê, Hà; Vũ, My. "Ho Chi Minh City Hall". Augustus in Saigon!?. Retrieved 2024-09-17 – via Fulbright University Vietnam.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ Phan Anh (2018-04-18). "Trụ sở mới của UBND TP HCM như thế nào?". Người Lao Động (in Vietnamese). Retrieved 2024-09-16.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  7. ^ Tâm Đức (2018-04-30). "Không xây mới trung tâm hành chính TPHCM". Sài Gòn Giải Phóng (in Vietnamese). Retrieved 2024-09-16.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  8. ^ Sỹ Đông; Phạm, Ngân (2023-07-12). "Chi gần 190 tỉ tu sửa trụ sở HĐND và UBND TP.HCM". thanhnien.vn (in Vietnamese). Retrieved 2024-09-16.
  9. ^ Vũ, My. "Public and the City Hall". Augustus in Saigon!?. Vietnam. Retrieved 2024-09-17 – via Fulbright University Vietnam.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  10. ^ Gwendolyn, Wright (1991). The Politics of Design in French Colonial Urbanism. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226908489.
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