Tuan Chau Island in northern Ha Long Bay, known as the “Garden of
Eden”, stands out from the thousands of other islands on the bay
because of its ideal retreat from the hustle and bustle of city life. It’s
not completely by chance that the island was host to many international
events including the Miss Vietnam 2004 Beauty Pageant, 22nd General
Assembly of the ASEAN Inter-Parliamentary Organization (AIPO) and ASEAN
foreign minister conference last year.
The island’s lush greenery, white sands and international-standard facilities have attracted many visitors.
Miss
Vietnam’s first runner-up Trinh Chan Tran has also chosen to work for
the resort’s developer, Ha Long Bay Group, as sales deputy director to
mark her first step in the business community.
The group,
established in late 2004, is a joint-venture of Vietnam’s Au Lac
Company and American partners, the Andy Dye and Tree Groups.
Island of feats
Located
eight kilometers from Ha Long city, Tuan Chau is the most beautiful and
only populated island among 2,000 islands in Ha Long Bay, which has
twice received UNESCO recognition as a World Heritage site in the past.
Tuan
Chau used to be deserted just like all the other islands on the bay
until Dao Hong Tuyen, chairman of Au Lac Company cum vice president of
the group, decided to take a big risk and transform the island into a
five-star resort.
In 1988, Mr. Tuyen was regarded as eccentric
and extravagant when he spent 80 billion VND to build a two-kilometer
road, the first of its kind in Vietnam to go across the sea, linking
the mainland to Tuan Chau.
Another great feat for resort
developers was the man-made beach that spreads across four kilometers,
and from a bird’s eye, looks like a silk strip edging the island.
More
than one million cubic meters of sand were transported for 200
kilometers to set up the beach where tourists can indulge in sunshine
and do water sports like surfing, paragliding, canoeing and beach
volleyball.
Visitor can also take refuge in the green hills at
the five-star hotel complex with 400 rooms. The resort is also building
300 more rooms as well as a seaside resort where villas will be
designed with a traditional architectural style.
An international
convention center and outdoor stage, dubbed the most magnificent stage
in Southeast Asia, take center stage at the island. The 12,000-seat
outdoor stage is home to several marine animal shows including
dolphins, seals, belugas and crocodiles as well as a circus and
high-tech laser fountain show.
The culinary area is a complex of
many apartments designed to imitate the architecture of a 17th or 18th
century traditional Vietnamese imperial palace. The area is surrounded
by green pine trees that make visitors feel like they are going through
heaven.
The complex covers 20,000 square meters and can serve 5,000 guests at the same time.
In
the near future, the island will also have a 27-hole golf course, an
Asian Residence Area with 50 first-class buildings earmarked for heads
of state and billionaires as well as a luxurious villa complex.
Other
projects are a helicopter landing pad, yacht club,
international-standard hospital, sports complex and schools. There will
also be an Underwater World, a port for direct cruise journeys to Hong
Kong and a cableway leading to Cat Ba Island.
Trinh Chan Tran has
spent most of her time, at times 18 hours a day, working in hopes of
applying what she learned abroad to develop the island into an even
bigger attraction.
What attracted Tran to the island were the folk tales of the bay.
The
story goes that the ancient Vietnamese, when first discovering the
country, faced threats from foreign conquerors and struggled to beat
their enemies who attacked from the sea.
But, a mother dragon
and her offspring, sent by the God to help the people, breathed out
countless pearls and gems which eventually transformed into the bay’s
2,000 islands. The invaders’ boats crashed into the islands and broke
to pieces.