Shenwei travels to Vietnam | There is a Korean city in Hanoi, Landmark72 is the most modern here
Shenwei travels to Vietnam | There is a Korean city in Hanoi, Landmark72 is the tallest building here, Hanoi Landmark 72 Intercontinental Hotel & Resort
It has been 7 years since I last went to Vietnam, and the changes in Hanoi are really big.
I didn't stay in the old street of Hoan Kiem Lake where tourists love to gather, but chose the latest landmark building, Intercontinental Landmark72.
It is not only the tallest building in Hanoi, but also the second tallest building in Vietnam and Southeast Asia, and it ranks in the top ten of the world's tallest hotels.
Anywhere in the hotel, you can overlook the cityscape of Hanoi and the distant Hoan Kiem Lake.
From the simplicity of the day to the dazzling lights at the beginning of the night.
The Intercontinental Landmark72 Hotel is located in Korean City.
Because Samsung, LG and others have factories here, it attracts a large number of Koreans to live in.
Living in the Intercontinental for 4 days, every day I heard languages other than English are Korean, and I rarely hear Vietnamese.
Out of the hotel, road signs, shops and billboards, etc., are mostly in Korean.
Perhaps because of the hot weather, I didn't see fashionable Korean brothers and sisters, but more Koreans with full of life faces, making me wonder if I was living in a living area in Seoul.
The hotel has a very large gym, which is used by hotel guests, apartment guests and social guests.
There are many courses from morning to night every day. I chose to experience the yoga class area I like. The whole venue is Korean practitioners. Every time the practice ends, the Indian teacher will say Namaste and 안녕하세요 (Hello in Korean).
At breakfast, what I recommend most is not PHO, but Korean-style soybean paste soup, Korean-style kimchi, Korean-style instant noodles, everything is authentic Korean.
However, the most recommended dinner here is Japanese teppanyaki, which is full of guests every day.
The lively Filipino chef can cook, sing and dance, which increases the appetite of the guests. You can refer to my live broadcast video for details.
Zhang Ailing said: "For people over thirty, ten or eight years are just things between fingers, and for young people, three or five years can be a lifetime.
So for the people of Hanoi, is 7 years a finger or a lifetime?
I think for all Vietnamese, it must be a huge change.
It is no longer the swaying of a green train in Duras's pen, but the soaring of a high-speed railway.
And the Intercontinental is one of the key factors driving this soaring. In the future history, it will accompany Hanoi from the fingers to a lifetime.