HO CHI MINH CITY, VIETNAM -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 11 July 2026 - As global urban challenges evolve, Vietnamese
Developers offer valuable insights into alternative development models.
For much of the past century, urban development followed a relatively
straightforward equation: build housing, expand infrastructure and
accommodate population growth. This formula is now showing its
limitations. As climate risk intensifies, biodiversity declines and
cities compete not only for investment but also for talent, developers
around the world are now forced to redefine the very nature and purpose
of what they build.
From the Gulf to Singapore, and from Scandinavia to Southeast Asia,
large-scale urban projects are evolving into integrated ecosystems where
mobility, green infrastructure, education, healthcare, digital services
and environmental restoration are planned together. The industry
paradigm has shifted from constructing buildings to designing places
capable of sustaining both economic growth and quality of life over
generations.
Vinhomes has initiated a comprehensive repositioning to navigate this global transition.
Known as Vietnam's largest residential developer, the company is
increasingly recognized not merely as a builder of housing projects, but
as a creator of large-scale lifestyle ecosystems, communities where
urban planning, technology, ecology and public services are conceived as
parts of the same system.
When Nature Becomes Urban Infrastructure
For decades, environmental considerations were often introduced after a city's masterplan had already been completed.
The emerging model reverses that sequence. Across many of its recent
developments, Vinhomes operates on the principle that natural systems
should become the starting point of planning. Hydrology, coastal
conditions, biodiversity and existing vegetation are treated as design
inputs that shape the urban layout from the earliest stages.
This philosophy marks a notable departure from conventional large-scale
development, particularly in rapidly urbanising markets where natural
landscapes have frequently given way to intensive construction.
With more than 30 developments across Vietnam and a land bank equivalent
to roughly two-thirds the size of Singapore, Vinhomes has the unusual
opportunity to test this planning approach at a metropolitan scale.
Rather than replicating identical urban formulas, each project is
designed around the ecological characteristics of its location.
The company maintains that the long-term success of a city should
ultimately be measured not by how much has been built, but by whether
natural ecosystems continue to thrive decades after residents have moved
in. That perspective aligns with an increasingly influential school of
urban planning in which green infrastructure is viewed as essential
public infrastructure.
Factors Compelling Cities Toward Regeneration
Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) frameworks have become
standard across global investment. Urban planners, however, are
beginning to question whether sustainability alone is sufficient.
Maintaining today's environmental conditions may no longer be enough if
tomorrow's cities must also respond to rising temperatures, sea-level
change and growing demographic pressures.
Vinhomes' strategic response is crystallized in its ESG++, a framework
that extends beyond conventional ESG principles by introducing two
additional objectives: Regeneration and resilience.
The distinction is subtle but important.
Regeneration implies restoring ecological systems rather than simply
reducing environmental impact. Resilience focuses on designing cities
capable of adapting to changing climatic, technological and social
conditions over many decades.
Projects such as Vinhomes Green Paradise Can Gio and Vinhomes Global
Gates Ha Long are intended to demonstrate how these concepts can be
incorporated into large-scale urban planning, combining renewable
energy, smart infrastructure and ecological restoration within a single
development model.
This shift highlights a growing global consensus: the success of
next-generation cities will ultimately be measured by their ability to
adapt to increasingly complex environmental challenges.
Vietnam's Urban Story Is Becoming Part of a Global Conversation
For many international audiences, Vietnam remains associated primarily
with its cultural heritage and natural landscapes. Urban development may
become an equally important part of that story.
Rapid urbanisation, expanding infrastructure investment and a national
commitment to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050 have created conditions
in which entirely new urban models can be planned without many of the
legacy constraints facing older cities.
This developmental opportunity is capturing increasing global interest.
Commenting on Vinhomes Green Paradise's participation in the global 7
Wonders of Future Cities initiative, Jean-Paul de la Fuente, Director of
the New7Wonders Organisation, described Vietnam as undergoing a
"transformative step change" in its national identity and global
positioning. He pointed to the country's progress in reducing the carbon
footprint of urban mobility as an example of coordinated action between
government and the private sector that offers valuable insights
extending beyond Southeast Asia.
For Vinhomes, participation in international platforms such as 7 Wonders
of Future Cities is therefore less about showcasing a single project
than about contributing to a broader discussion on how rapidly
developing economies might approach urban growth differently. The
company's evolution mirrors a wider shift taking place across the global
property sector.
Increasingly, the core value proposition for developers is no longer
anchored in how many buildings they can deliver. Instead, it centers on
whether they can create cities that remain economically competitive,
environmentally resilient and socially relevant long after construction
has ended.
https://vinhomes.vn/en