Social media made it famous. Reality made it unsafe.

Hanoi’s Train Street was never meant to be a tourist attraction. Once a residential railway, it became a viral tourism hotspot where trains pass inches from cafés and crowds. Now, after repeated public safety incidents, Vietnam is reportedly moving to divert trains away entirely.
A full-size passenger train passing through a narrow alley packed with people was never sustainable. And now the city is finally moving to put an end to it.
Authorities in Hanoi have proposed stopping passenger trains from running through the stretch of railway made famous by Train Street altogether. Under the proposal, southbound trains would terminate at Hanoi Station, while trains coming from the north would stop at Gia Lâm Station, with passengers continuing their journey using other transport.
When approved, this would mean passenger trains would no longer pass through the section between Hanoi Station and Long Biên Station. In simple terms, the Train Street moment would no longer exist and the must do Hanoi tourist attraction is no more.
The decision comes down to safety. Train Street sits inside a railway safety corridor, an area where cafés and crowds were never meant to be. As tourism exploded, visitors stood on the tracks for photos, businesses operated right up against the rails, and police were regularly forced to clear the street moments before trains arrived.
Authorities have tried partial crackdowns in the past. Temporary closures, warnings, patrols. None of it worked long term. The crowds kept coming, and the risk never went away.
By stopping passenger trains on this stretch entirely, the city removes the danger instead of constantly trying to control it. Officials have also tied the proposal into wider plans to protect and redevelop historic areas around Long Biên Bridge, shifting the focus toward safer, more sustainable use of the space.
For travellers, this means expectations need to change. The Train Street seen all over social media is already fading, and this proposal makes that official. Hanoi still has plenty to offer, just not at the cost of people standing inches from a moving train.
For a lot of travellers, Train Street wasn’t just another stop on the map. It was one of those moments that sticks. The quiet before the horn. Café owners folding tables back. Everyone pressed against the wall, half nervous, half excited, waiting for the train to pass.
For some, it was their first real “this feels wild” travel moment in Vietnam. For others, it became a photo they still scroll past months later, tied to a specific trip, a specific time in their life. That’s why this proposal will sting for some people.
It’s normal to feel disappointed when something you experienced, or hoped to experience, is taken away. Train Street became part of people’s travel stories. And those stories don’t disappear just because the trains stop running.
But at the same time, most travellers who stood there could feel it. How close it was. How little room there was for error. How one wrong step could have changed everything. This proposal doesn’t erase the memories. It just draws a line under a moment that was never me
ant to last forever. And for future travellers, Hanoi will still deliver those moments. They’ll just come from places that don’t rely on danger to feel unforgettable.
