The artistic façade of Vietnamese public architecture has been mostly overlooked since the colonial period in both theory and practice. The paper examines its evolution and contemporary revival within culture-based innovation. By looking at world history, the research affirms Vietnam’s façade as a mutable component, continuously reconciling foreign influences with indigenous culture. Using historical, aesthetic, and synthesis methods, the research schematizes Vietnamese architecture’s development process via three main stages: the bioclimatic vernacular, the Indochinese style, and the post-colonial modernist. The analysis points out a significant resurgence, not nostalgic mimicry, in the contemporary era, driven by sustainable cultural spaces and a critical re-engagement with tradition. The results clarify the fundamental façade’s characteristics, such as patterned cultural motifs, formal multi-layered mediation, and material ecological reproduction. The study comes to the conclusion that modern façades function as multi-purposeful skins, where ornamentation is turned into performance, promoting urban identity, harmonizing the surroundings, and communicating cultural narratives. The results contribute to creating a Vietnamese architectural identity that is appropriate for local culture as well as technological and ecological demands of the twenty-first century.
Duc Minh Tran (Mon,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: