So after living in Vientiane for over a year, I decided today it was time to visit one of the most prominent tourist sites in Vientiane. The Patuxay is the Victory Gate of Laos and was constructed in 1962. The story goes that the US government donated concrete to Laos to build a runway. No runway was built and this Arc de Triumph-like structure appeared. It is hence known as the world's tallest vertical runway. Now it stands at one end of Vientiane's Champs-Elysées with the presidential palace at the other. For about 40 cents, you can climb to the top and visit souvenir shops along the way. Interestingly, I was one of the few foreigners there and I was surrounded by enthusiastic Lao visitors. I particularly like the sign on the wall with a less than flattering description that seems to have been copied directly from a guide book. Ah, monster of concrete.
Sunday, September 27, 2009
Patuxay
So after living in Vientiane for over a year, I decided today it was time to visit one of the most prominent tourist sites in Vientiane. The Patuxay is the Victory Gate of Laos and was constructed in 1962. The story goes that the US government donated concrete to Laos to build a runway. No runway was built and this Arc de Triumph-like structure appeared. It is hence known as the world's tallest vertical runway. Now it stands at one end of Vientiane's Champs-Elysées with the presidential palace at the other. For about 40 cents, you can climb to the top and visit souvenir shops along the way. Interestingly, I was one of the few foreigners there and I was surrounded by enthusiastic Lao visitors. I particularly like the sign on the wall with a less than flattering description that seems to have been copied directly from a guide book. Ah, monster of concrete.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment