Palawan is globally celebrated as a haven of ecological tranquility, but one of its most profound landmarks is a monument to human compassion and political survival. Nestled along the highway in Barangay Santa Lourdes, about 13 kilometers north of the Puerto Princesa city center, lies Viet Ville Restaurant. This rustic, open-air bamboo pavilion is the final, flickering pulse of a 13 hectare refugee village established in the late 1970s for thousands of Vietnamese "boat people" fleeing the aftermath of the Vietnam War. Operating faithfully as of May 2026, it serves as a historic culinary destination where the recipes of an exiled generation are preserved and served daily to travelers.
The Birthplace of Palawan’s Noodle Obsession
While the original 200 cottages, Buddhist pagoda, and Catholic chapel of the village now sit mostly quiet as a woodland ghost town most refugees having long since resettled in Western nations the restaurant remains highly active. Viet Ville is the structural cradle of Puerto Princesa’s hyper-local food subculture: the chaolongan. Decades ago, the refugees introduced local Palaweños to the art of rice noodles, which locals adapted into Chao Long (a sweeter, localized version of beef pho). However, stepping into Viet Ville allows foodies to experience the original, uncompromised blueprints of Beef Pho and Bun Bo (beef stew noodles), which retain the deep, aromatic, and savory profiles traditional to Saigon.
Banh Mi Forged in Authentic Ovens
The clear standout of the lifestyle experience at Viet Ville in mid-2026 is its on-site French style bakery. The restaurant meticulously bakes its own traditional baguettes from scratch daily. The resulting Banh Mi available with fillings ranging from classic roast pork to savory tofu is universally praised by travelers for its flawless execution, boasting an incredibly light, ultra-crispy golden crust on the outside with a soft, pillowy crumb inside. Guests can even purchase individual, warm garlic-and-cheese baguettes to accompany their meals or pack as road-trip fuel before boarding boats at the nearby Honda Bay wharf.
A Slow-Paced Journey of Coffee and Remembrance
The ambiance inside Viet Ville is unpretentious and deeply evocative of the past. Built predominantly out of weathered bamboo, nipa thatch, and wood, the dining room is accented by kitschy, nostalgic Vietnamese decorations and stringed instruments. Time slows down significantly here; the kitchen operates on an old-school, made-to-order rhythm where hurried travelers are gently forced to relax. To transition into the hot May afternoon, diners typically pair their meals with an authentic Vietnamese Iced Coffee, slow-dripped through a traditional metal phin filter directly over sweet condensed milk or creamy coconut milk.









