Spring Fair at VEC Marks Vietnam's Most Ambitious Showcase Yet
Spring Fair at VEC Marks Vietnam's Most Ambitious Showcase Yet
Senin, 16 Februari 2026 | 10:26
HANOI, VIETNAM -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 14 February 2026 - For nearly two weeks, the Spring Fair 2026 turned
the Vietnam Exhibition Center into something few destinations manage to
become: a condensed, high-definition portrait of an entire country.
As the fair drew to a close, what remains is not simply a tally of
booths or sales figures, but the impression of a place that allowed
visitors to move 'through Vietnam' at remarkable speed. Within a single
afternoon, one could travel from the northern mountains to the Mekong
Delta without leaving a 90-hectare venue on the outskirts of Hanoi.
Framed as "A Marketplace of 34 Provinces," the event gathered regional
economies, culinary traditions and cultural performances under one
monumental roof. For many international visitors in Hanoi this spring,
it became a defining stop on the city's New Year cultural calendar.
A Country in One Afternoon
The scale was unapologetically large. More than 3,000 standard booths.
Around 2,500 enterprises. Participation from 34 provinces and cities
across Vietnam. Over 12 continuous days, the fair aimed for direct
revenue of 1,000 billion VND and operated at a pace that rarely slowed.
Inside, the exhibition floor was organized into thematic zones such as
"Vietnamese Cultural Essence" and "Vietnamese Agricultural Products -
Connecting Spring". The layout encouraged visitors to drift
geographically. One moment, they stood in the northern region. Minutes
later, they were tasting specialties from the south.
In the section representing Bắc Ninh, trays of bánh phu thê (sticky rice
cake filled with mung bean paste, traditionally served at weddings)
glowed under warm light. Nearby, vendors rolled out bánh cuốn Mao Điền
(thin rice sheets wrapped around seasoned minced pork and wood ear
mushrooms), the steam rising gently into the air. Nem chua (fermented
pork sausage) was sliced into neat portions, while bundles of mì gạo chũ
(sun-dried rice noodles from Bắc Giang) were arranged in pale, orderly
stacks.
Further along, the scent shifted. At a booth from Sơn La, strips of thịt
trâu gác bếp (smoked buffalo meat) were cut from darkened slabs and
dipped into a dense sauce flecked with mắc khén (wild mountain pepper
with a citrusy heat). The taste was smoky, slightly sweet and sharply
spiced. At another stand, mắm tôm chua (fermented shrimp paste with
chili and garlic) from Huế was wrapped with boiled pork belly and green
banana slices, layered with fresh herbs to soften its tang.
In the southern cluster, bánh pía (flaky pastry filled with mung bean,
salted egg yolk and durian) from Sóc Trăng were sliced while still warm,
their layered crust collapsing delicately to reveal a rich interior.
The aroma of durian lingered in the air, unmistakable and confident.
"I really liked how the space was designed according to each province's
characteristic... not only products, but also culture – music, people,
traditional dress. It clearly shows very thoughtful experiential
design," said an American visitor during the event.
For business delegations, the appeal went beyond atmosphere.
"We came here to find Vietnamese partners for cashew nuts, cacao and
coffee," said Mandel V. Panizares, representative of Green Agricultural
Products Trading in the Philippines. "Seeing the products directly and
discussing at the booth; this 'see and touch' approach helps us evaluate
quality and production capacity more clearly than just looking at
profiles or images."
Cultural performance threaded through the marketplace. Visitors found
themselves mesmerized watching more than 50 performers in restored
Nguyễn-era garments entered the main corridor for the "Hundred Flower
Parade". Gold embroidered nhật bình (formal imperial robes) shimmered
beneath the hall's lights. Ceremonial horses stepped carefully across
polished floors as shoppers paused mid-conversation to watch.
"The parade is not just a performance, but a living cultural experience,
where traditional Vietnamese attire, rituals, aesthetics and people
exist together within the flow of daily life and commerce," said Nguyen
Thanh Nam, a member of the project team.
Across the 12 days, more than 40 cultural programs and hundreds of
performances unfolded, including shows by the Vietnam Circus Federation
and the Vietnam Puppet Theatre. Music, acrobatics and folk art existed
in easy proximity to contract discussions and product demonstrations.
By the final weekend, it was clear that the Spring Fair had evolved into
something more than an exhibition. It functioned as a temporary indoor
festival city, layered with sound, flavor and movement.
The Platform Powering the Experience
The intensity of the experience was made possible by the Vietnam Exhibition Center itself.
Spanning 90 hectares, VEC is the largest exhibition complex in Southeast
Asia and ranks among the top ten globally. At its core stands the Kim
Quy Exhibition Hall, a 130,000 square meter column-free structure that
provides uninterrupted interior space on a scale rarely seen in the
region.
Built in just 10 months by Vingroup, Vietnam's largest private
conglomerate, and officially opened on August 19, 2025, the center
welcomed 1.2 million visitors within its first three days of operation.
Managing that volume required advanced crowd coordination, robust
security systems and integrated logistics capable of operating at
metropolitan scale.
The infrastructure extends well beyond the main hall. An 18-hectare
parking area accommodates more than 10,000 vehicles. Nearly 1,200
electric vehicle charging ports form the largest EV charging station in
Vietnam. Integrated storage zones, transport logistics and modern
electronic payment systems allowed thousands of booths to operate
simultaneously without visible strain.
VEC is also a member of the Bureau International des Expositions and
serves as Vietnam's official representative at global exhibition events,
positioning it within the international exhibition circuit.
"We believe that, building upon this foundation, VEC will continue to
thrive and evolve into a premier hub for major regional and
international events. When operated at its full potential, VEC will
emerge as a new symbol of a connected, prosperous, integrated,
innovative, and sustainable Vietnam, thereby elevating our national
standing in the country's new era of ascent.", said Mr. Tran Le Phuong,
Chairman of the Board of Directors, Vietnam Exhibition Fair Center Joint
Stock Company (VEFAC JSC).
During the Spring Fair, that capacity was visible in every operational
detail. Corridors remained fluid at peak hours. Multiple stages operated
without acoustic conflict. International delegations moved seamlessly
between provincial booths.
"I highly appreciate the handicraft products of Hue and high-tech
agricultural products of Thanh Hoa and Dong Thap," said Ozasa Haruhiko,
Chief Representative of JETRO Hanoi. "The diversity and quality here
strengthen my confidence in Japan-Vietnam trade potential."
As the 2026 edition concludes, the Spring Fair leaves behind more than
transactions and photographs. It has demonstrated that Vietnam can stage
large-scale exhibitions with cultural depth and operational precision
inside world-class infrastructure.