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Phú Mỹ Hưng urban area

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View of a corner of the Phú Mỹ Hưng urban area in Saigon South

Phú Mỹ Hưng urban area (Vietnamese: Khu đô thị Phú Mỹ Hưng) is a planned community in District 7, District 8 and Bình Chánh district, Ho Chi Minh City.[1][2] The area is managed by the Phu My Hung Development Corporation.[3]

On June 26, 2008, the Ministry of Construction and the People's Committee of Ho Chi Minh City recognized Phú Mỹ Hưng urban area as a "model urban area" of Vietnam.

Location

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Phú Mỹ Hưng is located along Nguyễn Văn Linh Boulevard, an arterial route through the South Saigon area included District 7, 8 and Bình Chánh; run from Tân Thuận bridge to National Route 1 and directly connected to Ho Chi Minh City–Trung Luong Expressway. It is spread over 3,300 hectares of land. The area used to be dense marshland and is defined by many waterways.

The whole area divided into 5 subzones, named as: A, B, C, D, E.

History

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The Phú Mỹ Hưng development was founded in 1993 by the Phu My Hung Development Corporation (Vietnamese: Công ty TNHH Phát triển Phú Mỹ Hưng), a joint venture between the Taiwanese CT & D group and the HCMC Government. The development was planned and has won awards on its urban planning.[citation needed] Since the late 1990s Phu My Hung has grown in size and population.

Every year since 2006 the Lawrence Ting Charity Walk has been held in Phú Mỹ Hưng - raising a total of $1.7m (up to 2023). It is hosted by the Phu My Hung Development Corporation.

Demographics

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In 2018, Phu My Hung's population was over 30,000 people, more than 50% of whom were foreigners from dozens of countries (according to Phu My Hung Development Company Limited). The largest number were still citizens of countries and territories in Asia, most coming from Korea, Japan, Taiwan, China...[4]

Subzones

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Phu My Hung Corporation is allowed to exploit and develop 5 urban clusters (750 hectares) from the 2600-hectares South Saigon Urban Area, forming an international commercial and financial center in Southeast Asia:

  • Zone A - New urban center (409 hectares): is the focal point of the entire urban area, attracting investors and businesses. With the architecture inspired by Causeway Bay in Hong Kong.
  • Zone B - University Village Area (95 hectares): inspired by the idea and experience of the community formation project around Silicon Valley in San Jose, California and the science and technology industrial parks in Taiwan. The University Village Area is a mixed-use functional area including residential areas, commercial areas, local services and public works (occupying 18 hectares). Some well-known universities have opened campuses here, including: HungHau Campus of Văn Hiến University, Campus N of UEH, Ho Chi Minh City Campus of RMIT Vietnam branch from Australia, e.g.
  • Zone C - High-Tech Center (46 ha): located at the intersection of Nguyễn Văn Linh and District Road 7 (now is Trịnh Quang Nghị Road), where enterprises related to high-tech industrial development technology in Vietnam are concentrated, surrounded by a multi-functional area that creates full conditions for those living and working here.
  • Zone D - Merchandise Circulation Center II (85 ha): located at the junction of Bến Lức River and Cần Giuộc River, convenient for port facilities, a major hub for distribution and circulation of goods, a place for storing food, related industrial warehouses, with a number of mixed-use commercial and residential areas, with 5 ha for public works.
  • Zone E - Merchandise Circulation Center I (115 ha): located at the Bình Thuận intersection of National Route 1, HCMC–Trung Lương Expressway and Nguyễn Văn Linh Parkway, including 5 districts: International Commercial District, Nguyen Van Linh Commercial Parkway, Industrial Warehouse, Port and Goods Trasportation, Mixed-use Residence. Zone E is conveniently located for the circulation of goods from all directions by water and road. The land reserved for public works occupies 14 hectares.

City center

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Zone A, the first subzone to be completed, is the Phú Mỹ Hưng New City Center (or New Urban Center), located entirely in District 7 with an area of 433 hectares. "Phú Mỹ Hưng urban area" is often called as a metonomy for this zone, it is divided into 8 functional districts, including:

  • The International Commercial and Financial District – C District: The most important district of the zone, often known as the CBD of South Saigon, along with the Thủ Thiêm New Urban Area and the historical city centre in District 1 and 3, is one of the most important CBD of Ho Chi Minh City with many office buildings are built here e.g UOA Tower, Vinamilk Tower, Manulife Plaza, Saigon Paragon, Lawrence S. Ting Building, etc. Multinational groups also banks, exchange and financial companies open their offices here, some notable names are Vinamilk, the Vietnam subsidiaries of UOA Group, Unilever, Manulife, KPMG and more. The Saigon Exhibition and Covention Center (SECC) is also located here, it held many major exhibitions and conventions, even concerts from many artists, including the Welcome Back Tour 2025 concert by 2NE1. The district is also home to the District 7 Administration Center. Moreover, there's still have residences, condotels and hotels constructions including Saigon South Hotel of French hotel brand Ibis, Capri Hotel Residences and Star Hill Residences, Dinh Thien Ly 1 School also here.
  • The Cresent District – CR District: Inspired by Singapore Bay area, the district is home to the well-known Cresent Lake (Hồ Bán Nguyệt), the central lake of the whole area, and the pedestrian Starlight Bridge (Cầu Ánh Sao) to cross the lake and connect with the other districts. Along the lake is the Cresent complex, with a residental area called Cresent Residence, low rise office-leasing area Cresent Plaza, where Fulbright University Vietnam located, and the shopping centre with high rise office tower Crescent Mall and Phú Mỹ Hưng Tower.
  • The Canal District – CN District: Imitated by the Canal District of Venice, Los Angeles, the district is where many shophouses and residental buildings are built.
  • The Hillview District – H District: The first residental area to be constructed and operated. Saigon South International School (SSIS) and Dinh Thien Ly school are two notable schools of the district. The Cresent Lake park is also in the district.
  • The Midtown District – M District: the central business district along Nguyễn Lương Bằng boulevard, located between Southside District and the International Commecial and Financial District. Villas and high-class apartments also here.
  • The Medical Campus District – MD District: including medical facilities, nursing, services, shopping, sports, entertainment,... meeting the diverse needs of people from medical and healthcare to services such as FV Hospital (220 beds), Tâm Đức Heart Hospital (180 beds), Vietnam-America Hospital,... and other health care facilities. The Nursing Health Zone also has a cluster of recreational sports facilities such as a golf driving range, a 9-hole golf course, a sandy bottom swimming pool and 4 tennis courts.
  • The Recreational and Cultural District – R District: The main works here are townhouses and apartments, including Hưng Thái townhouses and villas, Hưng Gia townhouses, Hưng Phước, Sky Garden apartment complex with a pedestrian and shopping area on the 2nd floor of the apartment complex, Wonderland Park and riverside park.
  • The Southside District – S District: a high-end residental district, including villa areas: The Chateau Castle Villa, Mỹ Gia 1-2, Mỹ Thái 1-2-3, Mỹ Phú 1-2, Mỹ Văn and the apartment complexes of Cảnh Viên 1-2, Mỹ Viên, Mỹ Khang, Green View. The distirct is like an oasis surrounded by rivers, with low construction density because there are many parks with a green cover density of about 10,000 to 20,000m². Located next to the International Commercial and Financial District and the Crescent District on the same axis of Nguyễn Lương Bằng boulevard with a width of 48m. Southside District is also home to many foreign schools for Japanese, Korean, Taiwanese.

References

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  1. ^ "Phu My Hung". New Urban Vietnam. 2014-04-05. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  2. ^ Harms, Erik (2016). Luxury and rubble : civility and dispossession in the new Saigon. Oakland, California. doi:10.1525/luminos.20. ISBN 978-0-520-96601-7. OCLC 964677228.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ "About company". Phu My Hung. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  4. ^ "Phú Mỹ Hưng - khu phố châu Á bờ nam Sài Gòn".