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Inside the surreal capital city of Brunei, a tiny nation of unimaginable wealth where oil money pays for everything and half the population lives in a floating 'water village'
Inside the surreal capital city of Brunei, a tiny nation of unimaginable wealth where oil money pays for everything and half the population lives in a floating 'water village'
Mark AbadiJul 12, 2018, 19:13 IST
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Brunei is tiny, but it's one of the richest countries in the world.
Its wealth is on full display in its capital city, Bandar Seri Begawan, where oil money pays for glittering mosques and extravagant architecture.
Much of the city's population lives in a floating village, where the houses, schools, and restaurants are all on stilts.
Brunei is one of the smallest countries in the world - at 2,200 square miles, it's smaller than Delaware, and its population is lower than that of Omaha, Nebraska.
Yet the Southeast Asian nation is also one of the richest in the world, with a higher GDP per capita than countries like the United States, Germany, and Japan.
Brunei's wealth is on full display in its capital city Bandar Seri Begawan, where grandiose mosques and extravagant buildings dominate the townscape and tributes to the country's mega-rich sultan lie around every corner.
But Brunei's capital is also a city of contrasts. Despite its flashy architecture, the streets of Bandar Seri Begawan are eerily quiet, and after dark, the lack of nightlife and bustle turns the mood downright surreal.
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Even stranger, nearly half of the city's population lives in a floating village where houses, schools, restaurants, and police stations all rest on stilts in the middle of the Brunei River.
Here's what it's like inside the capital of city of one of the most enigmatic countries in the world:
Bandar Seri Begawan is the small but flashy capital of Brunei, a tiny country on the island of Borneo. Bandar means "city" in the Malay language, while Seri Begawan is a royal title held by the sultan of Brunei's father.
Thanks to his country's oil and gas exports, the sultan of Brunei is the wealthiest monarch in the world, and one of the richest people overall, with an estimated net worth of $20 billion. His residence is considered one of the largest palaces in the world.
Inside the museum are artifacts from the sultan's coronation, as well as room after room of extravagant gifts he's received over the years from other world leaders.
Meanwhile, the residents of Bandar Seri Begawan don't come close to sniffing the sultan's wealth. This "floating village" on the Brunei River is home to an estimated 13,000 of the city's 27,000 people.
Kampung Ayer doesn't just contain thousands of residential homes, but also schools, restaurants, police and fire stations, and mosques — all on stilts.
That only intensifies after dark, when the city practically turns into a ghost town. There is no nightlife to speak of, as alcohol is banned nationwide.