A funny and annoying aspect of municipal projects in Da Nang
The construction never ends in this city and this is unlikely to change now that we are seeing a huge boom in the amount of people relocating here from the surrounding areas. Da Nang has seen an absolute explosion in popularity in the past years and this was especially true just over Covid and is seeing a huge push now as well because the visa situation in Thailand becomes increasingly difficult for people attempting to stay in SE Asia long term.
The construction isn't just people making more coffee shops, burger places, and dear lord, yet another Indian restaurant despite the fact that in my area alone we have over 40 of them. No, it is regular infrastructure that gets redone as well and this is all fine and dandy until you end up seeing how this is actually done/not done.

See this pit of sand and dirt? Well this was one of the areas widest footpath/sidewalks about a year ago. It had the same stone pattern that I guess is some sort of government order because all footpaths look the same no matter where you go in DaNang. Well a while back the city came by and for some reason, ripped up all the old stones and pulled them away in order to modernize it. They have already finished this idea on the other side of the road.

You can kind of see it over there along with a big mess of wires that has been sitting there for month and must not contain any copper or it would have been stolen by now.

You can see right here at the corner where the starting point was to get some sort of continuity for the entire block. The transition from light grey stone to dark grey stone for some reason, was something that necessitated ripping up the entire block's sidewalk and then laying it back down despite the fact that it was perfectly functional in its previous form.
But then the real problem sets in.
These piles of sand were dropped off when they were rushing to get this job to completion. Traffic was redirected and the entire area was a nuisance for everyone who lived here and was trying to get through this quite popular back road while the crews were given priority and the ability to do whatever they wanted while dropping off supplies. It was frantic, it was fast-paced, they worked at night under lights and it was looking really efficient. And then, about a year ago, everyone left and they have done nothing ever since.
LOL
I used to walk here on a regular basis, but now I can't because especially if it has rained recently, the piles of sand and brick are blocking almost the entirety of the once wonderfully wide footpath. They haven't been touched by anything other that dog poop in nearly a year. By the time anyone gets around to maybe considering finishing this job the sand will be so compacted from dozens of rainstorm and the fact that the poo-to-sand ratio is probably about 2:10 at this point will mean they probably will have to get rid of this sand and bring in new truckloads of it.
In the meantime the footpath is basically unusable and now everyone that walks on this street just walks on the road and is now creating slower vehicle movement and of course, tons of beeping of the horns.
This once quiet and wonderful area next to the music college now looks like it was recently struck by a bombing run.
I get that they want to beautify this area since it is very popular with tourists but why start something in such a frantic GO GO GO GO! sort of fashion and then just walk away and do nothing for a YEAR?
It honestly wouldn't surprise me if this part of land still looked this way by the time I move away from this very strange city.
This happens to us a lot back in the 90s. I guess every SE Asian countries are having the same kind of blow during their boom, where things started with crazy amount of enthusiasms and ended up with the following 30 over years of suffering.
I like how you proportionate the poop to sand ratio. It's like a giant cat litter box that doesn't get cleaned for years and the poop ratio keep piling up 🤣
there are several private builds in this city and probably all over the world that do a bunch of work and then some sort of accounting crunch comes along and they have to walk away. The difference between that and a 100 meter sidewalk is pretty big though, that and the fact that the government doesn't play by the same accounting rules as the corporate world. I wonder why they would just park the materials and then never come back? I would imagine all the tiles were stolen and the sand is so cheap that nobody bothers to steal it.
Problem with sand is, it takes effort and money to run the next construction project. Stolen construction material can't be written into the book, so there's absolutely no "value" in claiming the construction fee.
The only thing that always get stolen, is always about copper wires and high voltage electric cables. These stuff can always resell to metal recycler, so it can be "recycled" the sales process very quickly
Why am I paying so much attention to these stuff? Whilst I'm working in the insurance company, most of the contractor claims are always theft loss of cables 🤣 before my time, it was copper tubes that uses as water passage. Since British standard steps in and changed the ISO the 80s, plastics tubes and concrete pipes has replaced all copper tubes. So, that's not a problem anymore. The only cable that cannot be avoided, is still the electricity power supply copper cables.
I think this is happening in every country these days and there is no quality control with people checking what work is being completed.
The communist country of Vietnam is normally very good on finishing what they start though. I know of very few government projects that they just come by and do some of and then walk away. It happens in private industry all the time here. I dislike this footpath project the most though because me and a bunch of other people walked on it every day, there was no problem with the old one. Now we all have to take a chance in the street when we walk down it.
I know here if they budget for a certain project and do no work on it during that year they lose the budget. This could be one of the bizarre bureaucracy rules that make no sense.
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