The houses on the left are being razed to give way to Majestic.
In 1965, the hotel added two more stories based on the design of Vietnamese architect Ngo Viet Thu.
The hotel was right in front of the Saigon River.
But the pier was later built into a park.
The hotel in 1967
The US renamed the street Tu Do (Liberty) and the Vietnamese government changed it into Dong Khoi after the Vietnam War ended.
The hotel was ranked five stars in 2007. Work on two new towers of the hotel on Nguyen Hue Street started in July 2011 to add 353 new rooms.
Opposite the hotel is Cafe de la Rotonde, as shown in this 1901 picture
The name of the café means Round House, possibly because of its curvy front.
A driver waits with his rickshaw at one end of Catinat. Historical data said the first rickshaw in Hanoi was brought over from Japan in 1883, and it only showed up in Saigon nearly 15 years later. The city only had horse carts before that.
The café in this photo carries a new sign, Grand Hotel de la Rotonde. The city was using electric street lights.
Café de la Rotonde was a popular destination for rich people at the time.
The coffee shop is filled with customers one night in 1920.
If it was still there, the café would have one the best views of the Saigon River.
A building at the corner of Catinat and Vannier, which is now Ngo Duc Ke
On October 24, 1930, Henry Edouard Charigny de Lachevrotière, the editor in chief of a French newspaper, won a license to open Grand Hotel Saigon at the Catinat-Vannier
corner. The hotel replaced a small café.
The hotel was renamed Saigon Palace in 1937.
In 1958, it was renamed Saigon Dai Lu Quan, a Sino-Vietnamese translation of Grand Hotel Saigon.
Grand Hotel today
Café de la Terrasse Hotel at 130 Catinat, near the Opera House square.
The Opera House nearby
There was a patisserie, run by Mr. Marius Rousseng,
Saigon started serving electric trams in 1923.
The tram stop station in front of the former Café de la Terrasse
The construction of Caravelle Hotel finished in 1959, with investment from Air France and the Australian government.
Women walk along the street in traditional and modern dresses.
Caravelle was named after an aircraft model of Air France, which then had an office on the ground floor. Air France ticket booth is still there now.
The hotel was renamed Huu Nghi (Friendship) after the Vietnam War. It was rebuilt and only reopened in 1998 as Caravelle with a new 24-story tower. “The Quiet American” film crew stayed there in 2001.
Memory lane: More than a century of Dong Khoi, icon of Saigon beauty
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