This article is more than 11 months old

This article is more than 11 months old

Selfie-snapping tourists railed against the closure of Hanoi’s “train street” on Thursday after police blocked off the Instragram-famous tracks for safety reasons.

The narrow railway corridor in central Hanoi has become a hotspot among visitors seeking the perfect holiday snap on the tracks – often dodging the trains that rumble through daily.

But Hanoi authorities said this week they would block people from the tracks to avoid accidents, and police erected barricades on Thursday to keep out disappointed visitors.

“I’m very frustrated because today I can’t go in and take a picture,” said Mustaza bin Mustapha, a Malaysian tourist.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Police stand guard next to a barricade on the railway track. Photograph: Nhac Nguyen/AFP via Getty Images

Dozens of other tourists were turned away, though some managed to get onto still-open sections of the railway, moving out of the way as an afternoon train chugged past.

Built by former colonial rulers, the railway once shipped goods and people across France’s former Indochina colony and remains in use today by communist Vietnam’s state-run railway company.

The stretch of the tracks was once known as a rough part of town, occupied by drug users and squatters, until their recent discovery by camera-wielding holidaymakers who have posted images of the area across social media.

Cafe owners complained that business would be hurt by the new regulations, and that tourists always moved out of the way for oncoming trains.

“There have never been any regretful accidents here,” said Le Tuan Anh, who runs a cafe from his home along the tracks.

“Compared to traffic density elsewhere in the city, this is much safer,” he said, referring to Hanoi’s chaotic, motorbike-clogged streets.

New signs were installed in the area on Thursday, warning passersby not to take photos or videos in the “dangerous area”.

“People come from all over the world to Hanoi just to see the train go past,” said Harriet Hayes, a British tourist.

“It’s such a shame that we come and have been told that we have to leave.”