Yahoo – AFP,
Suy Se, 20 December 2015
Phnom Penh
is second only to Laos in East Asia for the fastest rate of urban
spatial
expansion, according to the World Bank (AFP Photo/Tang Chhin Sothy)
|
From glitzy
malls and high-rise flats to five-star hotels, a luxury building boom in Phnom
Penh is transforming a capital once reduced to a ghost town into one of Asia's
fastest growing cities.
Inside the
recently opened Aeon Mall in the heart of Phnom Penh, Cambodia's first mega
shopping centre, shoppers and curious residents flock to see the latest Levi's
and Giordano handbags, snapping selfies in front of a giant Christmas tree.
It is a
common scene across much of Southeast Asia but was previously unimaginable for
many in Cambodia where around 20 percent of people still live on less than
$1.25 per day.
But while
poverty remains entrenched, a fast-growing middle class and elite are
increasingly looking for local ways to spend their cash.
"I am
glad we have such a modern mall in Phnom Penh. It shows the city is
growing," says 20-year-old Bopha, a well-heeled university student who
said her family made more than $1 million in a recent land sale.
Bopha said
she used to have to travel to Thailand and Singapore for her shopping trips but
that was now changing.
"Their
cities are crowded with high-rise towers. I think we are heading in the same
direction to be like them," she beamed.
The $200
million Japanese-built mall is just one of dozens of new shopping complexes,
condominium projects and hotels springing up in Phnom Penh as Cambodia rides a
wave of high economic growth rates in recent years.
The capital
is second only to Laos in East Asia for the fastest rate of urban spatial
expansion, according to the World Bank, and its economy is expected to grow at
6.9 percent this year.
Rise of
the high-rise
All across
the city luxury high-rise condos are popping up with names like "The
Peak" and "Diamond Island", complete with billboards promising
aspirational taglines such as "Sophisticated Urban Living".
According to the government, Cambodia drew construction investment worth $1.75 billion in the first nine months of 2015, a 13.7 percent rise from a year earlier.
A ferry
sails past the five-star Sokha hotel in Phnom Penh (AFP Photo/
Tang Chhin Sothy)
|
According to the government, Cambodia drew construction investment worth $1.75 billion in the first nine months of 2015, a 13.7 percent rise from a year earlier.
Many of the
new entrants into the kingdom's building market are developers from Japan,
China, South Korea and Singapore.
The
39-storey Vattanac Capital Tower, Cambodia's first skyscraper which was
finished in 2014, is designed in the shape of a dragon and incorporates Chinese
traditional feng shui principles.
A few
kilometres (miles) away, the local Overseas Cambodia Investment Corporation is
drawing from the country's past, building Parisian-style apartments framed by a
replica of the Arc de Triomphe on a riverside complex in downtown Phnom Penh.
But some
are worried where the construction frenzy will leave a city once famed as the
"Pearl of Asia".
In its
French colonial heyday Phnom Penh was regarded as one of the loveliest cities
in Southeast Asia thanks to its wide European-style avenues, carefully
manicured gardens and picturesque stately homes.
Just a few
decades later, the buzzing city was reduced to a ghost town when Pol Pot's
brutal Khmer Rouge army seized control of the capital and ordered its two
million people to evacuate.
The city
has been coming back to life since the radical communist regime was toppled in
1979 but the surge of activity and change to its landscape has intensified in
recent years.
Poor
pushed to city fringes
Silas
Everett of The Asia Foundation in Cambodia fears the city's original charm is
fast disappearing with villas and stately buildings from the colonial era being
torn down to make room for lucrative new construction projects.
"Phnom
Penh's architectural heritage is world renowned... Yet the rate of destruction
of these buildings of significant cultural heritage is alarming," said
Everett, mourning in particular the loss of buildings designed by famed
Cambodian architect Vann Molyvann.
And while
wealthy Cambodians are lining up for a chance to live in some of the city's
most coveted new addresses, the urban poor are increasingly relegated to the
edges of the capital where many were evicted to make way for commercial
developments.
Critics of
strongman premier Hun Sen, who has ruled with an iron fist for the last 30
years, say he has turned Cambodia into a notoriously corrupt fiefdom where
those loyal to him are handsomely enriched.
But he
remains unapologetic about the capital's rapid transformation.
Phnom Penh,
he said during a speech in November, would have been a "coconut
plantation" had the Khmer Rouge remained.
Instead, he
added, "an already dead city survived through the bare hands of our
people".
Not
everyone has benefited, however.
Strolling
through Aeon Mall, Seng Seat, 60, says most of the products remain outside her
budget.
"The
price of some clothes and shoes at the retail brand shops is too
expensive," Seat said.
"I
just had a look at the price and left immediately."
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