Showing posts with label craft village. Show all posts
Showing posts with label craft village. Show all posts

Friday, November 26, 2010

Rival for old ceramics village

A new craft village site, the Minh Hai ceramic village, which has been
built near the Bat Trang ceramic village, began welcoming tourists on
October, and offers more choice for tourists looking for a day out from
Hanoi.


Bat Trang village is a well-known half-day tour
from Hanoi, but the new site will offer travellers more choices in
exploring a large natural site with folk performances and a backdrop
modelled in the typical style of craft villages in the northern delta
region.


The 10-ha Vietnamese art village displays
different traditional handicraft trades, such as ceramics, silk,
woodwork and bamboo.


A lake stage has been set up at the
site to feature traditional Vietnamese folk performances such as “cheo”
(traditional opera), “chau van” (spiritual music), “quan ho” (love
duet), “ca tru” (ceremonial singing), and water puppetry twice a day
every Saturday and Sunday.


Visits cost from 150,000 VND (7.5 USD) to 300,000 VND (15 USD) for a day-time tour.


The cost includes pottery practices, cultural performances, lunch and fishing from the lake.


The site is a 20-minute bus journey from the city centre. The No 47 bus
leaves from Long Bien station to Bat Trang village every 15 minutes
from 5.30am to 8.20pm daily.


The bus route winds the 12km
river dyke from Chuong Duong bridge to the east and runs across the site
gate, which is 300m from Bat Trang.


Visitors can explore both the site and Bat Trang village over a few hours.


Hanoian Nghiem Huyen Trang and her friends visited the site as soon as it opened last month.


The 19-year-old student, who grew up in the Old Quarter, said she
enjoyed the peace and quiet of the place, just 20-minutes from the
crowded city centre.


Nguyen Minh Hai, the owner of the
Minh Hai craft village, designed the gate of the site in the shape of a
pottery-kiln, while pavilions and stilt houses surround a big lake.


The passageway imitates a stream with dotted stepping-bricks in the middle.


Hai, 40, who has 20 years of experience in the tourism and pottery
industries, wanted the site to offer a new look at traditional ceramic
villages.


"Bat Trang village has been long-known as a
pottery centre, but it's not easy to promote it as a charming
destination due to its polluted environment. Although villagers have
introduced gas furnaces to replace coal-fired kilns," said Hai.


"I launched the cart-buffalo service 10 years ago, but I want to lure tourists with a new tourist product," he added.


The site has different galleries showcasing silks from Van Phuc Village
in Ha Dong town; brocade weaving from Sa Pa ; wooden furniture,
rattan and bamboo products, terracotta from Bau Truc in Ninh Thuan
central province and precious stone from Yen Bai northern province .


"It's like a miniature centre for Vietnamese craft villages. I even
made myself a flower pot with the help of a craftsman in the ceramic
workshop," said Tran Thanh Van.


Van, 28, a shop assistant from Hanoi , said she was glad to make the clay pot within half an hour.


Craftsman Nguyen Van Doanh, 36, instructs visitors in practising with porcelain clay.


"I teach them how to form thing with hands and a slab-roller. It lets them do a bit of handicraft," Doanh said.


"Tourists can take home unfinished things that they make themselves. We
want to let visitors have a bit of fun for a few hours."


The tour closes with cultural performances./.

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Monday, October 4, 2010

New ideas in traditional craft village tourism

Traditional craft village development potential, solutions to developing
tours to craft villages and bringing into play cultural heritage values
of handicraft villages were presented at an international seminar in
Hanoi on Oct. 4.


At the seminar, Head of the
National Administration of Tourism (NAT) Travel Department Vu The Binh
said that each heritage and traditional craft village contained
attractive and new interests for tourists.


Tourists can understand Vietnam ’s culture, beliefs and history through tours to heritages and villages, he said.


Many traditional crafts have been restored thanks to the development of traditional craft villages for tourism.


Representatives of the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA)
in Vietnam said that JICA would assist the development of
sustainable self-reliant communities through heritage tourism.


The project which will be carried out for four years until 2014 is
intended to improve the living conditions of people in Duong Lam ancient
village in Hanoi , Phuoc Tich ancient village in the central province
of Thua Thien-Hue and Dong Hoa Hiep in the Mekong delta province of
Tien Giang .


The seminar was jointly held by
NAT and the Hanoi People’s Committee on the occasion of the Thang
Long-Hanoi International Tourism Festival, to mark the capital city’s
millennium./.

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