Hanoi City People's Committee is seeking people's opinions on the master plan of Hanoi Capital with a 100-year vision.
The widespread consultation of the people on the Hanoi Capital Master Plan with a 100-year vision aims to mobilize the intelligence and enthusiasm of all classes of people, contributing to completing the development orientation of the Capital in the future.
People's contributions will be an important basis for building a scientific, feasible, and sustainable development plan for Hanoi.
According to the plan, the city plans to renovate and upgrade the landscape of existing prominent architectural works (Historical Ba Dinh Central Square, Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum Area, One Pillar Pagoda, Hanoi Flagpole, Turtle Tower, Opera House, O Quan Chuong, National Convention Center, Keangnam Building, Son Tay Citadel,...).
The city arranges new highlight projects in some key intersection areas and the Dong Anh gateway area and the space, hills, and landscape highlight areas (Ba Vi Mountain, Soc Son and Huong Tich Mountains, landscape highlights along the Red River, Day River, Tich River and Nhue River...).
Along with that, it is expected to propose some highlight projects as follows: Dong Anh gateway area; Xuan Mai central area; Western city center area; West Lake - Ba Vi axis area; National Theater and cultural and artistic performance center; National Exhibition Center; National Sports Complex of the Northern city; Landscape of riverside, canalside, mountainside roads;...
New architectural works in gateway areas; on important spatial axes and in areas of newly developed cities.
Strictly control the height of buildings in accordance with terrain characteristics, the current status of each area, the infrastructure capacity of each area and the requirements for preserving adjacent historical relic spaces (if any).
Limit the construction of high-rise buildings in mountainous and riverside areas, shielding the view from the city to the city's large open spaces. Limit the construction of large architectural works and high-rise buildings in hilly areas, distorting the terrain in the area.