Vincom Center Đồng Khởi

Vincom Center Đồng Khởi
Vincom Center B in 2013
Interactive map of Vincom Center Đồng Khởi
Former namesVincom Center B
Alternative namesVincom Twin Tower, Vincom Center Tower, Vincom Center HCM, Vinhomes Đồng Khởi
General information
StatusCompleted
TypeOffice building, shopping mall, apartment
Location
Construction startedLate 2009
OpenedApril 30, 2010 (2010-04-30)
Height
Height115 m (377 ft)
Top floor26
Technical details
Floor count28 (+6 Basements)
Lifts/elevators16
Design and construction
DeveloperVingroup
Other information
Parking40,000 m2 (430,000 sq ft) (B4, B5, B6)
Public transit accessL1 Opera House station
Website
Vincom Center Đồng Khởi

Vincom Center Đồng Khởi, originally known as Vincom Center B, is a mixed-use twin buildings of a same name shopping mall, office space tenant area and apartment on the five upper levels of the building (except the mechanical penthouse) invested and developed by Vingroup. It is located in the area formerly known as District 1, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.

History

On June 21, 2007, Vincom (now is Vingroup) announced a project that high-rise and real estate investors have been "half-believing, half-doubting" about for nearly a year now. It is a cluster of 3 towers invested by Vincom, divided into two lots, including an office complex, luxury apartments for rent, a 5-star hotel and a commercial center, located in the center of District 1, Ho Chi Minh City.

The first lot of nearly 12,000 m2 will be located at the current location of the Ho Chi Minh City Department of Education & Training and Chi Lang Park, which is originally known as Vincom Center B, including a commercial center, offices and luxury apartments, a long-term rental garage and a parking lot. The upper part of the first lot will be two 28-storey towers with a total area of 110,000 m2, one for apartments and the other for offices for rent. These two towers will share a base, used as a commercial center and parking lot. The second lot of the project has an area of 8,800 m2, located at the former Eden Commercial Center, surrounded by 4 main streets: Nguyễn Huệ Boulevard, Đồng Khởi Street, Lê Lợi Boulevard and Lê Thánh Tôn Street.[1]

Vincom Center B was started to construct in late 2009, then opened on April 30, 2010, to celebrate the 35th anniversary of the Reunification Day. Vincom Center B was secretly renamed as Vincom Center Đồng Khởi after the Vincom Center A was sold for VIPD Group (a business related to Trương Mỹ Lan) and changed as Union Square Saigon, the name was kept until now.

Criticism

The location of the Vincom Center Đồng Khởi on the plot of Chi Lăng Park and the Ho Chi Minh City Department of Education & Training has received many criticisms, mainly focusing on the transparency of the land allocation process. Specifically, public opinion and experts expressed concerns that the city seemed to have favored the appointment of the investor without organizing a public, competitive bidding as prescribed. This led to skepticism about group interests and the ineffective use of "golden" public land resources.

In addition, the transformation of almost the whole Chi Lăng park, a long time public space, into a massive commercial complex and the rest of the park accidentally became a "frontyard" of the complex was also criticized for increasing pressure on the central area's traffic infrastructure and changing the city's historical landscape.[2][3]

Features

The building is including two blocks called Tower A and B, both are connected by a 20-level podium, on top of the podium, also the level 21 of Tower A and B, is a swimming pool for residents of Vinhomes Đồng Khởi

Level Use
27 Mechanical penthouse
21–26 Vinhomes Đồng Khởi
4–20 Vincom Center Office Tower
3 Haidilao, King BBQ Buffett, Dookki, Xing Fu Tang, CJ CGV Cinema, Elite Fitness
B2–2 Vincom Center Đồng Khởi Mall
B3 F&B, WinMart Đồng Khởi
B4–B6 Parking

Notes


See also

References

  1. ^ "Các ông chủ Việt đua nhau xây building" [Vietnamese entrepreneurs competing to build buildings]. Tinnhanhchungkhoan.vn. Retrieved June 25, 2007.
  2. ^ "Công viên Chi Lăng... nay còn đâu!" [Chi Lăng Park... where is it now?]. Tuổi Trẻ. February 20, 2010.
  3. ^ "Công viên Chi Lăng đã biến dạng" [Chi Lăng Park has been deformed]. Người Lao Động. July 8, 2010.