In fact the bridge is about 100km from Hanoi, in a place called Hai Phong. A somewhat industrial port city that my fellow countrymen were shamefully bombing in my parents lifetime. Now, I lived about 100km from Heathrow Airport when I was in the UK - it takes not more than 2 hours. In Vietnam, that was 4 hours. Oh, and you need to add in an extra hour to get my visa on arrival (gratitude to the 4 other AECOM personnel who waited paitiently, and did not abandon me in Hanoi Airport!!)
The reason behind the slow traffic is mainly the motorcycles and slow lorries, and somewhat narrow roads. There is a complete lack of what I (and most western types) would call road discipline. In fact, the techniques I have for driving would be, frankly, useless in Vietnam.
So, with the slow Visa, and the long trip, I was not well pre-disposed to the trip. The weather didn't help either. It wasn't cold by UK standards. But I didn't see the sun in 4 days (again - this happens in the UK, but I'm a spoilt Singaporean, where this doesn't happen).
The place does have its charms. The people are very welcoming and friendly - and are quite happy to attempt to speak English to those who know not a single word of Vietnamese. It is also, quite like Java, a window into a time gone by elsewhere in Asia. Lots of small roadside stalls.
The bridge we're looking at building (quite some way into the future) sits over a port - the ships are BIG. Some 200m long in cases. There is an existing bridge, built a few years back, but currently it's 1 lane in each direction. Last year 3 ships drifted into it in a typhoon and bent it. They are now thinking they should repair it.
The food is relatively typical Asian. At least the stuff I ate was. Simple veg, with more elaborate meats. I don't think I ate anything too unusual, certainly some pidgeon though - quite tasty actually. The exception was an attempt at a western dish in our hotel: Chicken Maryland; breaded chicken served with tomato sauce, potato dauphinoise, and bacon wrapped around banana. No - not a typo! It really was bacon around banana, and tasted about as good as it sounds. So rubbish then. (Actually, the dauphinoise with tomato sauce isn't a great hit either. One to avoid next time).
I think that I'm heading back again in a few weeks time - hopefully I'll have enough notice to get my visa in advance and not have the queue for so long!!
Here are some photos:
The existing bridge
and where it got bent last year
The big ships that need to fit under our bridge
Lots of bikes - no rules
Roadside stalls - not quite sure what they do when a train comes.
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