Showing posts with label streets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label streets. Show all posts

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Works, rains make death traps out of HCMC streets

With two more deaths last weekend reportedly caused by careless road works in Ho Chi Minh City, infrastructure works are increasingly causing concern, especially when it rains.

A 30-year-old man was riding a bicycle in Thu Duc District’s flooded To Ngoc Van Street Sunday evening when he fell into an open manhole and was swept away by the swift waters.

Eyewitnesses said the water on the street meant there was no trace of the open manhole.

Contractors are working on the sewer to expand it, and not only did they leave it open but also put up no signs to warn street users.

When the man fell into the sewer, people rushed to try and pull him out but he had been quickly swept away.

Police found his body 30 minutes later stuck further down the drain.

Earlier, on Saturday, Ha Thi Tuyet Mai, 42, was run over by a truck when her motorcycle toppled after hitting a manhole cover in Kha Van Can Street also in Thu Duc.

She died instantly but her 13-year-old son escaped unhurt after falling on the pavement.

City residents have repeatedly written to Tuoi Tre, expressing concern and fear about the potholes on many streets caused by careless drainage and other works.

Nguyen Van Tien of Binh Chanh District said the roads near his house have been left potholed after street barriers were put up for works and then removed.

“[Even] heavy trucks are easily trapped in the potholes,” he said.

Holes up to two meters deep have recently appeared on Nguyen Kiem, Phan Van Tri, Hai Ba Trung, and Tran Nhat Duat Streets, posing a serious threat to drivers, especially on motorbikes.

The most notorious one -- in an alley off Le Van Sy Street in District 3 -- trapped a taxi last month, with photos all over the media showing the vehicle half inside it.

Since July 2008 dozens of people have been killed on the city’s streets in accidents caused by careless infrastructure works.

A person who works for a city road assessment agency told Tuoi Tre that many roadwork contractors misappropriate building materials, compromising quality and leaving holes and uneven surfaces.

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Monday, August 30, 2010

Cables to be buried in 15 streets in HCM City

HCM CITY — A new system of underground cable network will be installed in HCM City's districts 1, 3 and Tan Binh to replace the powerlines and telecom cables interlacing the city streets.

Fifteen streets in districts 1, 3 and Tan Binh are expected to be clear of powerlines and telecom cables, an eyesore of the city for years.

Tran Van Thanh, deputy director of the city Telecommunication Control Agency said the underground work would be completed at the end of this year.

Concerted efforts by relevant authorities including telecommunication, road construction, electricity and urban hygiene will be made to ensure the project schedule, according to the official.

No newly-built pavement will be excavated for the cable underground work.

Non-profit university gets first building

LONG AN — The non-profit Tan Tao University, situated inside the Tan Duc Industrial Park in southern Long An Province has inaugurated its first building.

It is the first of 64 buildings planned to be built in the next 15 years in the 103-ha campus at a cost of around US$400 million, said Dang Thi Hoang Yen, chairwoman of the HCM City Stock Exchange-listed Tan Tao Investment and Industry Corp , which owns the university.

Yen also announced full scholarships for all 500 students to be admitted to the 2010-14 course.

Ascott Ltd organises Blood Donation Day

HCM CITY — The Ascott Limited, a serviced residence operator in Viet Nam has joined with the Viet Nam Red Cross Society to organise a humanitarian blood donation on August 20 and 27.

Some 200 Ascott staff and residents staying in the 5 Somerset serviced residences in Ha Noi and HCM City would join in the event. The programme aims to help improve the public awareness of voluntary blood donation. — VNS

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