Tourist Attractions in
Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam -
Ho Chi Minh City tourism & vacations
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Ho Chi Minh City (
Vietnamese:
Thành Phố Hồ Chí Minh), commonly known as
Saigon (Vietnamese:
Sài Gòn) or by the abbreviations
HCMC or
HCM, is the largest city in
Vietnam and the former capital of the
Republic of Vietnam (
South Vietnam).
Following the fall of Saigon in
1975, Saigon was "officially" renamed Ho Chi Minh City. However the old Saigon name is still used by both Vietnamese and foreigners, especially when referring to the most central part of the city to which most tourists flock.
Please keep in mind Ho Chi Minh City is not a sex tourism city like
Bangkok or
Pattaya.
It's a conservative city, and prostitution is illegal and a serious crime.
See in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
=========================
Reunification Palace,
Enter at 135 Nam Ky
Khoi Nghia
Street, ☎ +84 8 9693272.
Open daily 7:30AM-11:00AM, 1PM-4PM.
Also known as Independence Palace (this is the old name). This is a restored 5 floor time warp to the 60s left largely untouched from the day before Saigon fell to the
North (construction started in 1962 and finished in 1966). Formerly South Vietnam's presidential palace, the war ended on
April 30, 1975 when tank #843 crashed through the gate. A replica of that tank is now parked on the lawn outside. Be sure to check out the impressively kitschy recreation room, featuring a circular sofa, and the eerie basement, full of vintage
1960s phones, radios, and office equipment, supposedly left exactly as it was found when the North took over. There is also a photo gallery and a propaganda film recounting how the
South Vietnamese military and
American forces succumbed to
Ho Chi Minh's revolutionary forces, upon which
point many South Vietnamese supporters fled as refugees, military and police were punished and many sent to labor camps.
Tours are available and are free, but not necessary. There is a nice outdoor café on the grounds outside the palace.
Entry 30,
000 dong.
War Remnants Museum (Formerly), 28
Vo Van Tan Street, ☎ +84 89302112, +84 89306325, +84 89305587 (warrmhcm@gmail.com). Open daily 7:30AM-12PM, 1:30PM-5PM, last admission 4:30PM. The museum was opened in a hurry, less than five months after the fall of the
South Vietmanese regime. It has moved to new premises with 3 stories of exhibits and various
U.S. military hardware (tanks, jets, helicopters, howitzers) on display outside the building. This disturbing display of man's cruelty during the Vietnam (
American) War includes halls full of gruesome photographs, a simulated "tiger cage" prison and jars of deformed foetuses attributed to contamination by
Agent Orange. An exhibit on the 3rd floor tells the story of the war journalists from all over the world who documented, and often disappeared or died in the war.
Watch out for the amputees who will try and sell you their wares. It's a short walk from Reunification Palace — see the museum pamphlet for a map. Entry 15,000 dong.
City Hall, end of
Nguyen Hue Street.
Originally called the
Hôtel de Ville and now formally re-branded the
People's Committee Hall, it's a striking cream and yellow
French colonial building beautifully floodlit at night. No entry, but the statue of
Uncle Ho in front is a very popular place for photos.
Museum of Vietnamese History, at the intersection of
Le Duan Street and
Nguyen Binh Khiem (just inside the zoo gates). The museum has a fine collection of Vietnamese antiquities.
Read up on
Vietnamese history first or you'll have no idea what you're looking at.
Outside, the
Botanical Gardens are very nice and a good place for a cheap lunch away from the crowds. If you care about animal welfare, avoid the zoo. There is a water puppet show in the museum compound that's worth watching, every hour between 9am-12pm and 2-4pm.
Entrance: 15 000 dong; 50 000 dong for the water puppet show.
Ho-Chi-Minh
Museum, Duong
Nguyen Tat Thanh, Dist. 4. Open daily 7:30AM-12 noon, 1:30PM-5PM, last admission 4:30PM, 10,000 dong entry. The museum (in a French colonial era building) near the dock of Saigon shows the life story of the modern day father of Vietnam, Ho Chi Minh. There's also a Ho Chi Minh book shop as well. Some may find the theme a little jingoistic but like most things it depends upon your point of view.
- published: 09 Nov 2015
- views: 643