
On the Saigon River, Italian craftsmanship unfolds as an experience of motion, taste, and design. Marking Made in Italy Day 2026, this curated journey brings together yachting innovation, fine wines, and culinary artistry, offering a rare perspective on how Italian excellence continues to shape global luxury and emerging markets like Vietnam.

On an April evening softened by the last light of day, the Saigon River became a stage for Italian excellence in its most fluid expression. Made in Italy Afloat: Italian Excellence on the Saigon River, presented by the Consulate General of Italy in Ho Chi Minh City, revealed a world where design, engineering, and lifestyle converge with quiet precision.
Held in honour of Leonardo da Vinci’s birthday, Made in Italy Day continues to celebrate a legacy shaped by creativity, craftsmanship, and innovation. This year’s focus on recreational boating reflects Italy’s enduring leadership in the global superyacht industry, with over 600 vessels currently under construction, representing more than half of worldwide orders. At the forefront stands Azimut Yachts, whose continued presence at the top of the Global Order Book speaks to a rare harmony between performance, design, and technical mastery.

In Vietnam, where over 3,000 kilometres of coastline and a network of rivers define both geography and possibility, this expertise finds a natural resonance. The Saigon River, in particular, is emerging as a new axis of urban life, where movement, leisure, and aspiration begin to reshape the rhythm of the city.
Against this evolving backdrop, guests stepped aboard the Azimut S7, an icon of contemporary Italian yachting. Its sculpted lines and advanced carbon fibre construction offered both lightness and strength, creating a sense of effortless motion across the water. The experience unfolded gently, from an exploration of design and marine innovation to a curated tasting of Italian wines, where the bright elegance of Gavi met the depth and structure of Barolo. A culinary narrative by an Italian chef completed the journey, each dish composed with a quiet attention to balance and detail.

Yet beyond the craftsmanship and refinement, the evening lingered in something less tangible. It was found in the soft movement of the river, in the glow of city lights reflected on the water, and in conversations that drifted as easily as the current itself. In that fleeting space between day and night, between Italy and Vietnam, the idea of Made in Italy became not only something to be seen or experienced, but something to be felt.

Supported by media partners including Oriental Media, Robb Report, and Esquire, Made in Italy Afloat closed not with an ending, but with a quiet impression. As the yacht moved gently through the Saigon night, it carried with it a sense of beauty that lingered long after the lights had faded, like a memory suspended between water and sky.
