
SaigonWalks designs short urban experiences that treat the city seriously: markets as archives, streets as evidence, religious spaces as social memory, food as migration history, and ordinary corners as clues to how Vietnam actually works.
SaigonWalks exists as the local-experience front door for people who want Ho Chi Minh City to make sense beyond landmarks and food stops. It also supports Scivi Travel and Vietnam Group Operator by showing the same operating DNA in public: grounded local research, strong field interpretation, careful pacing, and enough affection for the city to notice details that generic tours walk past.
That means a bowl of noodles can become a conversation about market systems, a shopfront can reveal Chinese-Vietnamese commercial networks, a colonial façade can open a question about state power, and a festival street can show how ritual, business and community governance coexist.

Not “try this because it is famous,” but why this dish appears here, who sells it, who eats it, how the market supports it, and what it tells us about movement across the city.
Saigon’s past is not one clean story. French planning, Chinese trade, Vietnamese state-building, migration, war memory and new capital all sit on top of one another.
A short walk only works when each stop changes how the next street is seen. The value is not volume; it is connection.
The current portfolio is deliberately urban, layered and expandable. Some routes are ready for leisure guests; others can be adapted for Scivi school, university and professional groups.

Ben Thanh, wet markets, snack economies, street-food logic and the invisible systems behind everyday eating.

Religious interiors, old buildings, dense alleys and overlooked fragments that explain how the city layers belief, trade and memory.

Commercial networks, temple life, festival processions, medicinal shops and the urban texture of Saigon’s Chinese quarter.
For Scivi Travel, SaigonWalks is useful because it proves the basic promise in miniature: a group can enter a complicated Vietnamese place and come out seeing more clearly. For Vietnam Group Operator, it shows that “local experience” does not have to mean thin entertainment. It can be operationally smooth, commercially viable and intellectually alive.
“A good walk should make the next street harder to dismiss.”
The homepage now holds back. The deeper image evidence sits across tour and note pages, where it can support the story rather than overwhelm the first screen.


















Use SaigonWalks for public-facing local experiences, custom private walks, or as a field component inside a Scivi / Vietnam Group Operator itinerary.