Architecture of Vietnam’s first radio transmission station

Duc Anh/VOV5
Chia sẻ

(VOVWORLD) - Once a French radio transmission station, an old French villa in Hanoi's Dai La street is the place where Vietnam's Declaration of Independence was broadcast to all over the country and the world on September 7, 1945. Built in October, 1912, the villa consists of 4 buildings. 

The villa, known as the Bach Mai Radio Broadcasting Station, originally housed the Radio Department of the French colonialists in Vietnam.

From this villa, Vietnam's Declaration of Independence was broadcast to all over the country and the world on September 7, 1945, five days after it was read by President Ho Chi Minh at Ba Dinh square in Hanoi.

The villa features typical French architecture.

The 40-centimeter thick brick walls make the villa warm in winter and cool in summer.

The back yard of the villa.

The villa is the residence of Nguyen Van Nhat and Duong Thi Ngan, the announcers who read the 1945 Declaration of Independence on VOV's air wave.

The Bach Mai Radio Broadcasting Station is sketched by architect Tran Thi Thanh Thuy, head of Urban Sketchers Hanoi (USH) - a collective of art enthusiasts, architects, and tourists who seek to encapsulate the essence of Hanoi's landscape.

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