VietNamNet Bridge – Living in a small alley with no name on Hang Chieu Street, one of Ha Noi’s old streets, Nguyen Thi Nga (not her real name) and 11 other people in her family share a nine-square-metre room and an attic.



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Cramped: Families live in small area of three or four square metres. 




Nga, 78, must use every inch of the room so that her family can sleep, and her house does not have a toilet.

Nga would be shocked if someone wanted to buy her house.  

“If anybody wants to buy houses in the area, they have to accept that the house does not have a toilet, family record book or house number,” she said.

More than 10 other households also live in Nga’s small unnamed alley. All of the houses are small, no more than 10sq.m each. Several houses are several square metres only and were built as add-on structures on the wall of another building.

Lan, a local resident, said that she could sell her house for VND5 million (US$220) per square metre, but if anyone bought it, they could not make a family record book because the house did not have regulated areas. Also, the house has no space for vehicles and no toilet.

Lan said that to qualify for a family record book, the house must measure at least 15squ.m per person in the family.

“In this alley, houses have 15sq.m for 10 people, not 15sq.m for one person,” said Lan.

Agreeing with Lan, Hoang Van Xuan, who lives with his son in a five-square-metre house in Alley No 44 on Hang Buom Street, said that his house was in the old quarter, but no one wanted to buy it even for a few million dong (VND1 million =$40) per square metre.



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Making the best of it: People take advantage of the small alleys for cooking and other daily activities. 




The old quarter in Ha Noi has more than 4,000 houses with house numbers, according to the Ha Noi Old Quarter Management Board. Each house has an average area of 92sq.m and is shared by three or four households, so the living area is 0.5-1.8squ.m per person.

As many as 63 per cent of the houses are downgraded, 12 per cent of them are in dangerous conditions and five per cent of them are polluted.

Population density here is more than 84,000 people per kilometre, one of the most densely populated areas in the world, according to the management board.

Ha Noi’s old quarter has nearly 1,000 houses built more than 100 years ago thus they are seriously downgraded. As many as 500 are low-roofed, and are super-cheap houses which few wants to buy.

Due to a lack of space, all resident’s motorbikes must be put in parking lots. Alleys on old streets are too small so only one person can pass at a time.

Meanwhile, fronted-street houses in the old quarter, especially the area near Hoan Kiem (Sword) Lake, have very high prices.



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Claustrophobic: Small and dark alleys need lights even in daytime and only have enough space for one person.


 

On streets in Ha Noi including Hang Ngang, Hang Dao, Dinh Tien Hoang and Ly Thai To, prices for houses and land are about VND1.2 billion ($53,300) per square metre. And fronted-street houses on other streets in the area are worth VND500-800 million ($22,200-35,500) per square metre.

For example, an 18-square-metre house on Hang Bong Street, about 300m from Hoan Kiem Lake, is for sale at VND12 billion ($533,000).

Do Trung Ha, an expert on real estate in Ha Noi, told the Tien Phong (Vanguard) newspaper that demand for houses in the old quarter area was not as “hot” as several years ago. Many people want to rent instead of buy.

Old quarter rent prices are high, up to US$1,000 per month if the houses are on famous streets like Hang Ngang, Hang Dao and Dinh Tien Hoang. Houses on other streets in the area are cheaper, but still expensive. For instance, a 12-square-metre house on Hang Non Street, is being rented for VND22 million ($950) for a month. 

VNS

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