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This is Hanoi Train Street, located in the Old Quarter.
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For outsiders, this might seem like a bizarre place to live, but, for the few Hanoians that reside on the small stretch of track, this is their home.
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Tall, narrow buildings tower over both sides of the path, while at ground level, people live out their lives on their doorsteps.
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The people here seem to have developed a harmonious coexistence with the coming and going of the train.
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As it passes, people re-emerge from their homes ready to carry on with their day.
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I arrived a little early so I could see how the people here live with the regular coming and going of the city's rail service.
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It was the calm before the train.
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A few women were cleaning up, kids on their way to school, guys getting ready for work, while tourists sat atop the rails chatting as if it were a regular street.
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Then suddenly, the locals got up and started moving their belongings off the track.
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Years of living on the train's timetable seemed to have cemented it in their minds and turned their body clocks to know exactly when the train will arrive.
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As the train sped past the buildings with just inches to spare, pedestrians pressed themselves tightly to walls with a startling look as the carriages narrowly missed the end of their nose.
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The train is gone as quickly as it arrived.
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Within seconds of its passing, children bounce back towards the center of the track to once again play.
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The community emerges to carry on with their day as if nothing ever happened.
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It is this spectacle that has recently seen more and more tourists flock to Train Street, hoping to capture that perfect Instagram pose while walking the lines or witness the madness of a speeding train rushing just inches from the buildings.
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I have to say, that is why I visited.
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I wanted to see this unique place for myself.
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If you get past the idea of the two steel lines that stretch down its center, this is really just another street in Hanoi.
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Only rather than dodging a constant barrage of motorcycles, you have the train a few times a day to contend with.