Yangon–the Fabric of the City

If Yangon (or, as we were wont to call it, Rangoon) were a fabric, it would be a fine quality one, satin with gold embroidery, a beautiful piece, but old, frayed and torn. But it would be repaired in a haphazard manner, perhaps by a person who didn’t know how to do it, or who didn’t have the needed matching threads and pieces to work with. And who, despite the fabric’s sad condition, is still using it, an old favorite.

Piranesi meets William Gibson in the ruins of the British Raj.

The main traffic circle downtown displays some of this quality: a pagoda tightly surrounded by shops in what, in Europe, would be a medieval manner. Surrounded in turn by several (four?) lanes of traffic.

Sule Pagoda

 

But the thing that struck Dan and me the most in the downtown area of Yangon was the unusually fine heritage of British Raj-era buildings that were in an unusual–perhaps even dangerous–state of decay. And occupied anyway. This decay may have been exacerbated by the government’s removal of the capital and its accompanying administrative functions to Naypyidaw in 2005. According to at least one source, Yangon has (or had) the largest number of colonial-period buildings in southeast Asia.

Here’s one, one side of which has completely crumbled away, been overgrown by vegetation, and is still used for…something…

 

Here’s another.

Other buildings, whether Raj-era or not, display a similar surreal quality.

Out in the neighborhoods, the lack of infrastructure becomes apparent, but so does the vibrancy of community life.

Every apartment or condo has its own unique electric wire from the pole (rather than one larger wire to bring electricity into the building, then separating it there). This makes for interesting electrical vistas.

Not all the streets are paved. (The sidewalks are worse.)

But there are cafes…

…where friends enjoy getting together.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Southeast Asia

In the near future, I am going to begin posting a (long) series of blog entries about Dan’s and my recent trip to Singapore, Myanmar, and Cambodia. I’ve been through a first-pass edit of literally thousands of photographs, and I’m culling the best few that will give you a flavor of what the places, the people, and the activities were like, without putting you into visual overload.

So that you can get a sense of the big picture, here’s a table of contents, of sorts. I’ll start with Myanmar (Burma), move on to Cambodia, and then show Singapore. This is not the order in which we traveled. We traveled to Singapore first, then Myanmar, Cambodia, and (briefly, no pictures) Thailand. However, the order I’m using makes sense as we will move from the most removed from what we consider the “modern” world to the most modern.

Inside Myanmar, I’ll show some highlights of Yangon (Rangoon, until recently the capital) first, then Bagan (a UNESCO World Heritage site), bustling Mandalay, and the enchanting and surreal Inle Lake. Each of these may require more than one entry, so it’s going to be a longer Web journey than the actual trip. But I hope you’ll stay with me on this visual adventure!