Showing posts with label Shopping 购物. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shopping 购物. Show all posts

Monday, November 11, 2024

新山士乃机场 - 越南胡志明市 / Walkabout In and Around Ben Thanh Market Saigon

Sunday, March 4, 2018

chuyên mua bán các loại trái cây sỉ và lẻ


chuyên mua bán các loại trái cây sỉ và lẻ 

chuyên 专 specialised
mua bán 买卖 buy sell
các loại 各类 every types
trái cây 水果 fruits
sỉ và lẻ 批发与零售 wholesale and retail

Friday, January 12, 2018

HCMC to open second book street in 2018

Ho Chi Minh City to open second book street in 2018

Visitors to the second book street in Ho Chi Minh City can peruse their purchases and sip coffee at a book café nearby



Visitors review entries of Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper’s photo exhibition at the gallery at Nguyen Van Binh Book Street, Ho Chi Minh City. Photo: Tuoi Tre Ho Chi Minh City’s second book street, to be located in District 7, is expected to become another cultural rendezvous for urbanites and promote the reading culture.

The municipal People’s Committee has ratified a project to build the city’s second book street on Nguyen Dong Chi Street in Tan Phu Ward.

The venue, named after Nguyen Dong Chi, a revered folk culture researcher, is expected to open in 2018.

The municipal administration has tasked the District 7 People’s Committee with implementing the project using funds contributed by the private sector.

Investment in the street, which will boast 20 richly-decorated stalls and a coffee shop, is estimated at nearly VND14 billion (US$ 614,731).

Representatives of the Vietnam Publishers Association’s Ho Chi Minh City office revealed the city was planning to set up a book street in each of its districts in a bid to promote the reading culture.

According to a survey recently conducted by the Ho Chi Minh City Book Street Management, over 58 percent of the 450 respondents said they went to the book street to buy printed publications, while 36 percent of them affirmed they were drawn to the venue to read books.

The poll also found sightseeing and sipping drinks as purposes among nearly 50 percent and 19 percent of the respondents.

The survey findings confirmed the necessity of launching a book street in densely populated areas, which is also in line with current trends.

The future rendezvous will adopt the same model as that of Nguyen Van Binh Book Street in downtown areas, which opened in January 2016 to the delight of avid readers and publishers.

Lined with old trees providing lush foliage, Nguyen Van Binh Book Street spans 144m and 8m in length and width, and boasts sidewalks which are 6m wide.

Apart from 19 book stalls, other highlights are an exhibition space and a book café, situated next to the Saigon Central Post Office, one of Ho Chi Minh City's icons, which is a perfect place for visitors to skim their newly-bought books and sip their coffee while delighting in the beauty of the heart of the southern metropolis.

The street has emerged as a favorite hang-out for local residents, voracious young readers and expats on weekends.

Alongside Nguyen Van Binh and Nguyen Dong Chi Book Streets, city authorities have also planned to launch three other book streets in other districts, with the third venue likely to be located in District 5.

Speaking at The Sofa, a monthly book-themed discussion group held on Nguyen Van Binh Book Street in December 2016, Le Hoang, deputy chairman of the Vietnam Publishers Association, said while more books have been printed in Vietnam over the years, it remains an issue that few Vietnamese are fond of reading.

Hoang said textbooks and school reference books accounted for as many as 80 percent of the books available on the market.

“The reading rate amongst Vietnamese is only one book per person per year if we exclude these two types of books,” he said.

The Vietnamese only spend $2 a year on books, compared to $10 by the Chinese and upwards of $200 for those in developed countries, Hoang added.

~News courtesy of Tuoi Tre News~

Wednesday, November 29, 2017

miễn phí giao hàng


miễn phí giao hàng 免费交货  free delivery
miễn phí 免费 free
giao hàng 交货 delivery

Friday, July 21, 2017

trung tâm mua sắm



Trung tâm mua sắm 购物中心 shopping center
Giải trí 娱乐 entertainment
Ẩm thực 饮食 culinary

Saturday, April 8, 2017

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

trung tam thương mại

trung tam 中心 centre
thương mại 贸易 trading




trung tam thương mại 

贸易中心
trading centre

Sunday, April 10, 2016

HCMC to ban eating, drinking from walking street

Ho Chi Minh City to ban eating, drinking from walking street



Eating and drinking, along with several other activities, will be prohibited from the Nguyen Hue pedestrian street in Ho Chi Minh City, which will take effect later this month.

The municipal People’s Committee has issued a ban on several activities, including eating and drinking, on the street and the area around the statue of President Ho Chi Minh.

Other actions to be banned include the illegal occupation of roadways and sidewalks, unlawful construction, behaviors that affect order and aesthetics in the area, superstitious activities, and all wrongdoings that compromise public hygiene.

The sale of food and drink, marketing, the vending of other products, and those cultural activities that violate regulations on civilized lifestyle, social security and order, and the prevention of fire and explosion.

In addition, the new rules will forbid the use of loudspeakers, horns, gongs, drums, and whistles, and assembly of people without permission of competent authorities.

The Ho Chi Minh City People’s Committee has decided to establish a special team to control the situation on the walking street and to directly work with other relevant agencies.

The new regulations will take effect on April 18 and will be enforced directly by authorized units and indirectly with surveillance cameras installed along the street.

The 670-meter long walking street was opened in April 2015 and has become one of the favorite destinations of local people as well as tourists.

The venue attracts many people every night and is even more crowded on the weekend.

According to Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper reporters’ observation on Saturday evening, the street was packed with citizens, mainly young Vietnamese who are high school and college students.

The young people were sitting in groups along the street to enjoy their street foods, of which many were spilled while leftovers and food containers were often left on the ground.

Despite the placement of numerous recycle bins along the road, littering has remained an unsolved issue as it is easy to spot plastic bags, empty water bottles, candy wrappers and others around the planters.

Even after being reminded, many people still throw their trash on the ground, according to a volunteer working on the walking street.

~News courtesy of Tuoi Tre~

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

người việt nam ưu tiên dùng hàng việt nam

người việt nam ưu tiên dùng hàng việt nam
越南人优先用越南货

Vietnamese people to use Vietnamese goods as priority

người việt nam 越南人 Vietnamese people
ưu tiên 优先 priority
dùng 用 use
hàng việt nam 越南货 Vietnamese goods