​Sài Gòn
Mid-Century Modernist Architecture
Vietnamese identity is demonstrated in the architectural language of Vietnamese modernist architecture, a mid-century modernism that is remarkable for its climate mitigation and vernacular specificities. Significantly, modernism was integrated into the Vietnamese culture based upon Vietnamese traditional architecture, and therefore bears a very strong poetic spirit in architecture. This makes Vietnamese modernist architecture an invaluable heritage that engaged and captured the identity of the Vietnamese people in modern times.
Photographs
Videos
Analysis
References
Poetic Significance
“Poetic Significance” presents beautiful architectural photography, diagrams, and the history of the very rich and complex Vietnamese modernist architecture from the mid-century in Saigon, Vietnam. Vietnamese mid-twentieth-century modernist architecture made its way into the Vietnamese vernacular culture to be recreated and transformed by the ordinary people. Through their creations, this book tries to discern the modern architectural aesthetics of the Vietnamese people which reflects how the architecture of Vietnam, an ancient Southeast Asian culture, has appeared and developed in modern times.
When asked about Vietnamese architectural identity, most people would associate Vietnamese identity with the period before the French colonisation, comprising the traditional architecture of wooden communal houses or imperial palaces. That is widely accepted. But less known, yet more significant, is that this very same identity of Vietnamese authenticity has made its way into modern times, surviving colonialism to thrive again in a new material reality.
Vietnamese modernist architecture appeared in Saigon, the capital of South Vietnam during the Second Indochina War. It was a branch of modernism with a rich architectural vocabulary of various micro-climatic strategies. As a result, this architecture appears lighter, airier, more graceful and less monumental in comparison to global modernism. Unexpectedly, the ordinary Vietnamese people took this language and practiced it on their own in making their modernist shophouses. This created a modernist architecture without acknowledging it, and modernism then became a means, catalysed and enriched by the collectivity of the Vietnamese culture. It became a new tradition of building houses. And primary in this tradition is a distinctively vibrant and poetic taste.
In response to the rationality of global modernism, the Vietnamese people realised a new branch of modernism that is intensively dense, yet vibrant, rich, abstract and thoroughly poetic. It demonstrated a focus on the feelings and the spirituality that architecture can have.
This very special sensitivity of the Vietnamese people contrasted with global modernism. And this contrast is, in fact, the modern identity of Vietnamese architecture, rooted directly from Vietnamese traditional aesthetics. It deserves, therefore, a formal recognition and appropriation, especially domestically as globalisation raises questions of self-consciousness, authenticity and identity in Vietnam’s society.
Those who study, practice architecture or who are interested in design, art, history and culture will find that this book shows how modernism came to be in Vietnam and how it has been adopted by the people directly as their new vernacular architecture. Through simple yet frequently-used architectural elements like louvers, planters, pergolas, handrails, brise-soleil, columns, beams, etcetera, the Vietnamese people have crafted artworks of an authentic taste and a strong identity. Readers will find this work helpful as a handbook that exposes a bright, but hidden example for the world of how architecture, art and culture co-exist in southern Vietnam, and how rationality and spirituality are intertwined into human creations.
In the middle of the twentieth century, Southern Vietnam was one of the centres of modernism...
Pham Phu Vinh
Urbanist Vietnam
| 04 January 2021
In the middle of the twentieth century, Southern Vietnam was one of the centres of modernism...
Pham Phu Vinh
Urbanist Vietnam | 16 October 2020
To answer what is the identity of Vietnamese architecture, most would probably name traditional architecture...
Pham Phu Vinh
Urbanist Vietnam | 25 September 2020
What was Vietnamese architecture after colonialism?...
Pham Phu Vinh & Camille Pinson
Saigoneer | 05 February 2021
... Vietnamese modernist architecture is therefore not the soulless, bland modernism of International Style buildings seen around the world...
Mel Schenck
Saigoneer | 28 July 2020
The last 30 years have seen unprecedented economic development in Ho Chi Minh City...
Kate Tipler
Saigoneer | 04 November 2018
Architecture provides insight into the values of a society and the aspirations of its people...
Mel Schenck
Saigoneer | 17 May 2017
Modernism diasporas can be found anywhere in the world. But in few countries, there is such a seamless transition from traditional to modernist architecture like in Vietnam...
Pham Phu Vinh
Hidden Architecture | 24 May 2021
...This has made Saigon a laboratory of ideas. From a collective architectural vocabulary of modernist elements, house-owners pick and tweak the language to their will...
Pham Phu Vinh
Southeast Asia Globe | 28 April 2021
...Completed in 1973, the V.A.R building at 9 Ho Tung Mau Street in Nguyen Thai Binh Ward, District 1, is a prominent example of Vietnamese mid-20th-century modernist architecture designed by architect Lê Văn Lắm...
Pham Phu Vinh
Saigoneer | 22 April 2021
...From the 1960s towards the end of the 1970s, urban centers in southern Vietnam saw robust and widespread growth of modernist influences in architecture...
Khoi Pham
Saigoneer | 02 June 2021
...Mostly created by homeowners or contractors spontaneously without any participation from architects, modernist dwellings in the mid-twentieth century have captured Vietnam's personality that shares lifeblood with art, cuisine, and culture...
Pham Phu Vinh
Saigoneer | 26 May 2021
Phạm Phú Vinh, Designer and Writer.
​
Phạm Phú Vinh is a Vietnamese architecture student who has been pursuing his study of architecture at the University of Architecture of Ho Chi Minh City and will receive his Bachelor of Architecture degree in June 2021. Like many people in the influx of population moving to Ho Chi Minh City for either education or job opportunities, he was taken by the modern, open, vibrant and intensive identity of the city. With a foundation of languages including Vietnamese, English and French, a love for history and culture as well as involvement in different art forms, including painting, photography, videography and graphic design, Vinh has found Ho Chi Minh city “fertile” for discoveries. Trips on a motorbike in this city are where he discovered the remarkable mid-century modernist architecture in Ho Chi Minh city. He came to appreciate it for the distinctive architectural language that is oftentimes overlooked. In 2018, Vinh filmed and produced the video “Saigon modernism - Unique features” that received recognition from the Facebook group “Vietnamese Modernist Architecture”. Vinh completed a one-year internship, working on hospitality projects in Vietnam and Cambodia that complimented his studies and research. He has led many walks around the city to introduce Vietnamese modernist architecture to people. Vinh attended the Lê Văn Miến art market in 2018 where he presented his postcards showing Ho Chi Minh city’s significant modernist buildings. His articles “A new look at Saigon’s mid-century shophouses” and “Từ khi nào kiến trúc Việt Nam trở nên hiện đại - When did Vietnamese architecture turn modern?”were published by the magazine Saigoneer and Urbanist Vietnam on 05 February 2021 and 25 September 2020. Phạm Phú Vinh’s featured projects and research can be found at https://phamvinh.wixsite.com/featured/.