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Vinavico Group (Underground Works Construction Joint Stock Company) is an industrial conglomerate of Vietnam. The company was founded in 2003 and its main offices are located in Hanoi . Vinavico's main work is in construction , viz buildings , industrial , transport infrastructure, irrigation and hydropower projects, specializing in underground ...
In the first half of 2022, Vietnam's construction industry growth rate reached 5.59%. [43] [44] [45] In 2022, Vietnam's construction industry accounted for more than 6% of the country's GDP, equivalent to over 589.7 billion Vietnamese dong. [46] [47] The industry of industry and construction accounts for 38.26% of Vietnam's GDP.
Thái Nguyên Industrial High School, Thái Nguyên Town; Viet - Duc Industrial High School, Sông Công Town, Thái Nguyên Province; Industrial Technique High School, Bắc Giang Town/Province; Industry and Construction High School, Uông Bí Town, Quảng Ninh Province; Foodstuff Technology High School, Việt Trì City, Phú Thọ Province
Vingroup JSC (Vietnamese: Tập đoàn Vingroup – Công ty CP, lit. 'Vingroup Group – JSC') is a Vietnamese conglomerate headquartered in Long Bien district, Hanoi. Vingroup is one of the largest conglomerates of Vietnam, [3] focusing on technology, industry, [4] real estate
The logo of formerly Vietnam Shipbuilding Industry Group. Shipbuilding Industry Corporation's predecessor Vietnam Shipbuilding Industry Group (Vinashin) was a state-owned shipbuilding firm in Vietnam. It was one of Vietnam's leading industrial concerns, and entered into a partnership with Damen, [1] Kongsberg, and Hyundai. [2]
Manufacturing in Vietnam after reunification followed a pattern that was initially the reverse of the record in agriculture; it showed recovery from a depressed base in the early postwar years. However, this recovery stopped in the late 1970s as the war in Cambodia and the threat from China caused the government to redirect food, finance, and ...
The Ministry of Construction (MOC, Vietnamese: Bộ Xây dựng) is a government ministry in Vietnam responsible for state administration on construction, building materials, housing and office buildings, architecture, urban and rural construction planning, urban infrastructure, public services; and representing the owner of state capital in state-owned enterprises.
During the Vietnam War, the University of Civil Engineering was evacuated to Huong Canh, Vinh Phuc province. After peace was restored, in 1982, the school began planning to move back to Hanoi. At the end of 1983, the school officially moved back to Hanoi but was dispersed in four different locations: Co Nhue, Phuc Xa, Bach Khoa and Dong Tam.