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JAPANESE COVERED BRIDGE

Engineering works
3.8/5
12 review

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Nguyên Thi Minh Khai, Hoi An, Vietnam
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2024
Recommended
2024

This bridge, built in 1593 to link the Japanese and Chinese quarters, is now threatened by bad weather.

Built in 1593 to connect the Japanese district with Chinatown. In 1986, work allowed the bridge to recover its original speed bump, levelled by the French in order to allow vehicles to pass through. According to a legend, there was once a giant named Cu whose head was in India, his tail in Japan and his body in Vietnam. Each of his movements triggered a natural disaster. To protect the city, the population built the bridge, preventing the giant from moving at ease. In the middle of the bridge, the small pagoda Câu (chua Câu) dates from the 17th century. It would shelter the soul of the giant stirrer and it honours Tran Vu, the guardian genius of the North. The frontispiece indicates that in the 18th century the bridge was called Lai Viên Kiêu [ "Bridge of Friends from afar"], a name that is no longer in use.

On either side of the entrances, the two monkeys and two dogs indicate that the construction began in the Year of the Monkey and ended in the Year of the Dog. Dating from 1593, a Japanese stele dedicated to protecting the bridge is enclosed in a tree at 98 Phan Chu Trinh Street.

The bridge is now threatened by the violence of the storms - typhoons and floods - that hit the region every year. The thousands of visitors who enter the bridge every day put its foundations to the test. Restoration work is being studied. Experts recommended the complete dismantling of the structure. Each part would be restored individually before the reassembly of the structure.


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Members' reviews on JAPANESE COVERED BRIDGE

3.8/5
12 reviews
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bigpbdx
Visited in march 2017
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Un très joli pont, qui vaut la peine d'utiliser une des visites du ticket combiné afin de passer à l'intérieur!
KIMI4554
Visited in april 2017
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A ne pas manquer car ce pont est très beau et nous a rappelé un peu le ponte vecchio de Florence. Beaucoup de charme
Fannyy05
Visited in november 2015
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Ce pont est très mignon mais c'est surtout l'ensemble de la vieille ville qui a du charme. A voir de jour, mais aussi de nuit, car l'ambiance lumineuse est très différente! Par contre, petit point négatif: le système de payement est difficile à comprendre; parfois il faut payer une visite, parfois pas....
AlexIsa
Visited in july 2015
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Hoi An est une ville avec beaucoup de charme et le pont Japonais y contribue. Il vaut mieux visiter la ville en dehors des wend-ends. La plage n'est pas loin pour y passer la journée et revenir en ville en fin d'après midi pour flâner et y manger.
Aurebo
Visited in november 2015
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This bridge is beautiful, however pay on one side and not of the different... We do not have the nearby!
However beautiful bridge in a beautiful city

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