Showing posts with label Bangkok. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bangkok. Show all posts

Bangkok Goes Boutique

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From the large five-star hotels along the Chao Praya river to the tiny hostels of Khao San Road, Bangkok has long offered a choice of accommodation to suit all tastes and budgets, whether for company executives or backpackers on a shoestring. However, following the global trend for small is beautiful and personal attention is king, a growing number of intimate boutique hotels have recently opened their doors in the city, offering travellers a charismatic and exclusive alternative to the often drab large city hotel experience.

Ibrik, 256 Soi Wat Rakang, Arunamarin Rd, Bangkok, Thailand, tel: +66 2 848 9220
www.ibrikresort.com
One of the first (and the smallest) to open was the Ibrik, located on the banks of the Chao Praya river near the atmospheric Wat Arun. With three rooms, Moonlight, River and Sunshine, all designed in separate styles, the Ibrik introduced the boutique scene to the capital nearly three years ago, starting a trend that shows no signs of abating. In fact, following the success of the Ibrik by the river, Ibrik have recently opened their second operation on Sathorn Road, also with three rooms, allowing guests to experience their special brand of personal hospitality a little closer to the centre of the city.

Arun Residence, 36-38 Soi Praty Nokyung, Maharat Rd.
www.arunresidence.com
Also bang on the tiver, a short top from the flower market and historic old town, is the Arn Residence. Boasting one of best views in the city - Wat Arun sits right opposite on the other side of the river - the Arun Residence features five rooms, all of which look out over the water. The largest, the Arun Suite, sports its own private river terrace while three smaller rooms, the Chaba, Leelavadee and Lotus, are split level with double beds on the mezzanine. Lastly, for travelling friends or families, the larger Orchid room features twin beds. The restaurant, which serves both local and international dishes, spreads out onto a charming wooden riverside terrace where guests can watch the colorful river traffic steam past. Those on the lookout for authentic Thai food should try the street stalls at the end of the soi, which serve an excellent selection of cheap noodles and other Thai snacks.

Aurum, 394/27-29 Soi Pansook, Maharaj Road, Pranakorn, Bangkok.
www.aurum-bangkok.com
Less than 100 metres downstream Aurum is another newcomer to the city. The owners here hace successfully converted an old warehouse into a stylish European-style small hotel offering 12 comfortable cozy rooms, a stone's throw from some of the city's top tourist destinations, including the Grand Palace, Wat Po and the bustling 24-hour flower market. Guests here can enjoy free wi-fi access and an interior of stylish modern Thai design, with tasteful furnishings and art pieces. Like the Arun Residence, the hotel lies at the end of a dead-end street, guaranteeing no traffic noise from the road, although the riverboats can sometimes make a fair racket during the day. There's a small coffee shop in front of the hotel with excellent views over the river to Wat Arun.

Seven, 3/15 Sukhumvit 31, Bangkok, Thailand
www.sleepatseven.com
The newest boutique hotel in town is Seven, situated off Sukhumvit 31 in a leafy substreet close to the shopping centers and skytrain station at Phrom Phong. here six rooms and a reception area take their influence from the traditional Thai calender, where every day of the week has its respective color corresponding to the Gods of India astrology. Monday is yellow after the moon god Phra Angkarm, Tuesday is pink after the Mars god Phra Angkarn, Wednesday is green for the Jupiter god Phra Pareuhat, Friday is blue for the Venus god Phra Suk, Saturday is violet fort he Saturn god Phra Sao and Sunday is red for the sun god Phra Arthit. Converted from an old shophouse, Seven blends these traditional hues into a modern contemporary design, where each guestroom features its own unique color scheme and furnishings. When you have fewer guests to look after, you can spoil them more and at Seven they want to make you feel special. Guestroom facilities include a mobile phone with local number, wi-fi access, widescreen TV, mini bar and an ipod dock sound system.

The Eugenia, 267 Soi Sukhumvit 31, Bangkok, Thailand
www.theeugenia.com
Style from a very different era is in huge supply at the nearby, The Eugenia, where you could be forgiven for thinking you'd stepped into a colonial hunting lodge and not a brand new city hotel. The Eugenia's 12 all-suite rooms must be the most romantic in town with the decor a gorgeous representation of 19th century chic - think four-poster beds, soft linen, copper bath tubs and dark hardwood floors. The inspiration behind the hotel comes from owner, Eugene Yu Cheng Yeh, a Taiwanese interior designer and architect, who's responsible not only for the building construction itself. Amazingly, although it looks like it's been there for an age, it's less than a year old. Inside, this weather-beaten feeling is perpetuated by antiques from around the region, dark wooden floors, and public areas that feel more like a private
home than a hotel. there's a library stacked with books and magazines, a homey breakfast lounge area and a brand new Burmese-scented restaurant. Outside in the shaded courtyard, oversized
sun lounges line the small pool. Old world charm is met with modern facilities and guestrooms have access to free wi-fi internet, free international phone calls and flat screen TVs. To round off the experience, pop out to replenish your pipe tobacco in one of hotel's cars, available with chauffeur to ensure that even your taste of Bangkok's legendary traffic will be a memorable one.

Dream, 10 Sukhumvit Soi 15, Sukhumvit Road, Bangkok
www.dreambkk.com
Following the success of the fashion-oriented Dream Hotel in New York, flamboyant owner Vikram Chatwal added another feather to his expanding hotel empire last year with the opening of Dream Bangkok. With 100 rooms, Dream is almost too large to quality as a boutique property but for guests looking for something a little different, it certainly fits the bill. Dressed in the same fashion as her older sister, albeit with an Asian flair, Dream provides the city with its first interior could have leapt from the pages of the latest interior design tome. The hotel's fabulous decor is best enjoyed at the bar, where a pink leopard and a tiger caged in hanging beads patrol the floor. The heavily reflective bar is a masterpiece, immediately propelling the hotel into the higher echelons of the city's stylish nighttime hangouts. Add the modern Mediterranean flavours of Flava next door and it's not difficult to while away a few hours of gastronomic indulgence. Up on the atmospheric guest floors, rooms are ultra modern and sleek, featuring flat screens, free wi-fi and a special blue light therapy that reputedly sends guests into a deep slumber.
Dream aims to stay at the forefront of the Bangkok fashion world, holding regular events and parties and is clearly geared towards a more adventurous hotel guest, bored by the tedium of large business hotels.


BANGKOK RESTAURANT & HANGOUT PLACE

The Social Lunch
The Cup
3F, Lake Rajada Bldg, 193/21-22 Rajadapisek Rd.
Cuisine: International; Closed: Evening
In the days when it occupied a lot at the Peninsula Plaza,Bangkok's galleria pa excellence, there was no more fashionable rendezvous after a shopping spree. The location has changed, but elegant thanyings still congregate for social chit0chat and francophile fare in the third-floor dining room near the Queen Sirikit Convention Center.

The Social Dinner
The China House - Hotel Oriental
Once a private residence, Bangkok's most beautiful Chinese restaurant seduce the guest with valuable decor, graceful intimacy, charming service, and Cantonese specialties by four acclaimed chefs from Hong Kong. A drink in the front garden, a tete-a-tete dinner in the dining room or an exclusive banquet in one of the separces upstairs belong to the civilized pleasures of life.

Romantic Dining
Oriental Terrace - Hotel Oriental
Cuisine: Eclectic, Barbecue
Criticize the flotsam in 4he river, the passing gin palaces and the pret-a-porter tourists - and you're just not a romantic! No place is fuller of lure and lore, from the early morning mist to the late-night glow. Incognito stars favor a table by the balustrade, an evening drink as the sin sets behind the temple rooftops, a barbecue dilner and the his4orical ambiance,

The Show Place
Sala Rim Naam - Hotel Oriental
Cuisine: Thai
The Pavilion bu the Water's Edge', a three-minute hotel-boat shuttle across the Chao Phraya River, is the first temple to visit in Bangkok. Folklorist and touristy it is, but who can resist the playful decoration of the interior, the graceful beauty of the dancers and the spicy tastes of the local fare. After the set-menu show you can revel over a digestif on the terrace.

The Sunday Brunch
Colonnade - Hotel Sukhotai
Cuisine: Eclectic
On SUndays, when the traffic onslaught of the returning hordes from Pattaya only jams the city in the afternoon, people from all over flock to the chicest and liveliest brunch in the arcades of the Sukhothai which sometime extends to the Celadon and the garden. Light snacks are served in the muscal interior of traditional Thai murals and designer paraphernalia.

The Institution
Normandie - Hotel Oriental
Cuisine: Haute Cuisine; Close: Sun. Lunch;
World-renowned Chef Louis Outhier oversees his Eastern 'Oasis' on top of Bangkok's unofficial palace. The world's 'Who's Who' dine here: literai, glitterati, romantics and well-heeled travelers who indulge in the changing menu of prime products served in grand style, and in the panorama across the Chao Phraya. The most prestigious dinner invitation in town.

The Eclectic
Stanley's French
20/20-21 Ruamrudde VIllaee, Soi Ruarudee, Ploenchit Road
With its sophisticated image from Hong Kong and European style, it scored an immediate success with the exhibitionistic elite. In an area fast becoming Restaurant Row, Stanley's combines an airy Provencal atmosphere with dishes from classic to Cajun and Creole served in Nouvelle Cuisine presentation.

The Exotic
Harmonique
22 New Road, Soi 34
Cuisine: Thai (no A/C) ; Closed: Sunday
When Jacques Deen from Holland and his Thai partner Boonma Vattana set up their woks in a quaint Chinese style shophouse around the corner from the Oriental, an international clientele and their local friends became habitues from the innocative specialties like spicy green mango salad with black crab or beef on basil leaves. The antique interior is for sale, too.

The Trendy
Spasso - Hote Grand Hyatt Erawan
Cuisine: Italian
Spango in L.A. was no more popular in its beyday. The 'Tuppies' (Yuppies a la Thai) have adopted the cellar bar-restaurant nightclub (with American bands drowning their mobile-phone conversations) as their meeting point for lunch and dinner, for networking and showing off. The open pizza oven works overtime; scaloppine and salmone are just as well prepared.

The Seafood Place
Lord Jim - Hotel Oriental
Joseph Conrad is well, if not alive, and his image well established at the Oriental Room service at the Author's Wing namesake suite is fine, but bass and bouillabaisse, salmon and sashimi, sushi and tempura and the vast seafood buffet are a maritime gourmet's experience at par with the hotel's standard. The boat-deck parapernalia lends a nautical theme and the Oriental staff their innate charm.

The Japanese
Benihana - Hotel Marriott Royal Garden Riverside
When Rocky Aoki opened his first Benihana as a four-table bistro on New York's West Side, he didn't imagine he would open a branch as the best teppanyaki restaurant of Bangkok in the Royal Garden 25 years larer. (Apart from 50 more world wide). Overlooking a Japanese atrium, the chefs demonstrate their lightning slicing skills with the best meat in town.

The Thai
Lemongrass
5/1 Soi 24, Sukhumvit Road
On balmy evenings the pretty garden swarms with expat society and yuppie gourmets sporting fashion models and mobile phones. The intimately lit antique dining rooms set the scene for one of the city's most extraordinary kitchens. Try out the southern specialties, like khao yam or nam prik kung siap. They drive you to tears - not from homesickness.

The Vietnamese
Thien Duong - Hotel Dusit Thani
Rama IV Road
You won't eat as elegantly between Hanoi and Saigon, let alone as excellently. Potted bamboo trees along the bay windows look out on the courtyard; artistically designed furniture and antiques enhance the exotic illusion. A cuisine pleasing even to snob gourmets spoil by Michelin-starred establishments in Paris makes this a magnetic culinary forum.

The French
Le Banyan

59 Soi 8, Sukhumvit Road
Closed: Sat. to Mon. lunch
Were it not for the Oriental's Normandie , (from which one of the owner0chefs comes), this little old Thai house full of antique wood carvings, art photography and glamorous objects would be the culinary Lourdes in Bangkok. Bruno Bischoff and Michel Binaux have established an authentic Haute-Cuisine restaurant with specialties which even please the French.

The Italian
Vito's
20/2-3 Ruamrudee VIllage, Soi Ruamrudee, Ploenchit Road
Cuisine: Casalinga
Undoubtable the Italian restaurant in Bangkok. Gianni Favro, previously of the prestigious Heritage Club, has broken the mould of predictability found in the city's other tavernas. Spread over two floors in the hight-class restaurant arcade (Stanley's, Wit's, etc), Vito's loyal habitues relish the creative Italian dishes.

The Business Bar
The Champagne Bar - Hotel Dusit Thani
Rama IV Road,
In Bangkok's liveliest city hotel you also find meeting places of creative relaxation, quiet enough for contractual secrecy and open enough for casual networking. Away from the bustling lobby, it's the ideal spot dinner at one the in-house restaurants. (For intellectual or romantic intimacy, however, go to the Library 1918).

The Social Bar
Wit's Oyster Bar
20/10-11 Ruamrudee Village
Cuisine: English
Wit's is Pravit, and owner Pravit is the ultimate Anglophile whose ample girth and personality make him an ideal host here. His Public-school education is evident in the authenticity of this Wheeler's-of-London-style oyster bar. It's popular with an eclectic mixture of well-behaved bangkok residents and cosmopolitan that is for the roasts and pies - and Pravit.

The Jazz Place
Brown Sugar
231/20 Soi Sarasin, off Wireless Road
You'll meet interesting people and docile foreigners (skipping Patpong, for once). Indulging in the beat of Bangkok's best jazz bar. Bands from all over the world stop by; many local greats jump onto the career trampoline here. A few tables outside, a casual crowd inside and an atmosphere so joyful you'll forget about the rusticity of the joint.

The Night Club
Leo Grotto
1000/167-178 Soi 55, Sukhumvit Road
Midnight falls and status cars stop at the dead end of this side street. Finish your conversations in front of the exclusive business-and-shopping complex where debonair owners Surat and Tao have hit the jackpot with a quasi-private club for the happy-go-lucky. Champagne in hand, beautiful bodies in sight, you'll drown in the rhythms of American bands.

The Circus
Peppermint
Soi Patpong, Silom Road
You better take a nap before heading for this frantic arena after midnight where everyone meets, anything goes and sweet words are not taken at face-value. (The music drowns the details, anyhow). Pretty girls from all over the country (some a bit materialistic), long-term residents from all over the world (some immune against the obvious charms), loud music and a good-nature frenzy until sunrise.

The Madhouse
Rome Club
Queen's Mews, Patpong 3 Road
Let your hair down, unbutton your shirt, forget about taboos and open up to exotic encounters, spontaneous affection, and wild night. A true institution on Patpong, you could almost call it classy compared to most of the other clip joints down the alley. Hallucinatory music, mad whirls on the dance floor, kaleidoscopic sensuousness, and loads of good times where even the short-lived love seems to be authentic.

The Spa
The Oriental Spa - Hotel Oriental
What could be added to this hotel legend with its new arcaded chalet, across the river, promises total regeneration. From traditional Thai massage to innovative spa cuisine - aroma therapy with rare herbs to lift you to the skies, and anti-jet0lag treatment for a soft landing, are a heavenly introduction to the tao of complete physical happiness.

The Romantic River Cruise
Hanohra Song - Hotel Marriott Royal Garden Riverside
From the sun deck of the Royal Garden's lovingly renovated rice barge, the world looks like the Garden of Eden, in 4he comfortable cabins underneath life is a dream. Varnished woods, Thai silks and Indian rugs enhance the luxurious feel. Take a candlelight dinner cruise up the river, or rent the whole boat with your best friends to sail to Ayuthaya overnight.

Shopping
Even if business doesn't bring you to Patpong, you must dive into the sea of market stalls for a close encounter of all kinds, all wares, exhibited among the girlie and gay bars. All off the luxury goods' labels are fake, most of the materials, however, of good quality. The Chatuchak Weekend Market has local goods and local color. Piled high in air-conditioned glitz, opposite The Regent, are the goods for the affluent society: Peninsula Plaza, the Tha) version of Hong Kong's Central Plaza, even has a Galeries Lofayette dependance and Frank's, CHinese and Thai jewelry. River City, next to the Regent; Burmese treasures are best at Elephant House. One name stands out for masterly craftsmanship: Jim Thompson, the king of silk, on Surawong Road. A little rench flair has entered the silken accesories at Choisy, across the street, whereas Anita, in Silom Road, feeds Harrod's in London with her bales. Men never had it so good: A.Song, in Chartered Bank Lane (near the Oriental), is the tailor of all tailors. One-stop shopping at its most congenial, anyway, are the boutiques at The Oriental.

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WHERE TO STAY IN BANGKOK

5 star for 3 star holidays



The Headquarters

The Oriental Hotel - 316 rooms (78 suites)
48 Oriental Avenue, Bangkok
A legend, a myth, a reality - the ideal gateway to Southeast Asia. At the glamorous Oriental Spa on the opposite river bank your jet-lag will be massaged away after arrival and your body rejuvenated. The floor butler takes care of you as if you had come home. The General Manager created an abode of Western luxury, Oriental charm and a unique personal service. Staying here, you understand why so many think it is the best hotel in the world, and why the world, from heads of state to pop stars, from historians to sentimentalists, all pay tribute to the hotel - which has become a landmark, a romantic rhythms and the only place for the Happy Few. You don't have to leave for gourmet cuisine (Normandle), jazzy rhythms (Bamboo Bar), chamber-music concerts (Lobby), a cool swim or hot night, for fanciful folklore (Rim Naam), for in house shopping ot just dreaming up illusions in the suites of the Author's Wing. Almost every major event, from family anniversary to grand affair, is celebrated at the Oriental.



The City Hotel

Grand Hyatt Erawan - 400 rooms (45 suites)
494 Rajdamri, Bangkok
However one may long for nostalgia in this city of perpetual change, everyone loves the 'new' Erawan on the grounds of the old. Amidst the business district of the pulsating capital, across from the World Trade Center to one side and the Paninsula Plaza to the other, local still flock to the fabled shrine on the doorstep. Impressive the palatial architecture, the marbled entree, the gargantuan lobby. But the Garden Lounge for tea or the Water Terrace for snacks alfresco put you back into more human dimensions. The Ruen Thai and The Chinese Restaurant are famous for their cuisine, and Spasso, the turnable of local jeunesse doree and international jet set, for its pizza and live music. The Club Erawan Fitness Spa helps balancing sins and stress of executives, as the business centre serves managers' needs round the clock. No river view, but comfort and creative colour schemes in all the rooms and pink and white marble in all the baths.



The City Hideaway

President Solitaire
Sukhumvit Soi 11, Bangkok 10110, Thailand
Located within the heart of one of Bangkok's most exclusive residential and business districts, the President Solitaire offers a luxurious oasis of exclusive and elegant accommodations within the bustling city streets. A warm welcome from our friendly and caring staff awaits as you are swiftly transported to the sumptuous surroundings of your pristine suite - your home away from home for the duration of your stay. 134 elegantly appointed suites, coupled with the latest in high-tech entertainment and business facilities, make the President Solitaire a perfect choice for discerning visitors wishing to enjoy high standards of excellence and the finest in Thai hospitality. Indulge yourself at our lavish Ananda Spa, which offers a sanctuary of total relaxation and privacy in which to gently ease away the pressures and demands of your day. Moments from the thriving shopping, business, and entertainment districts surrounding Sukhumvit Road, and a stone's throw from Nana BTS SkyTrain station, President Solitaire offers you convenience and comfort. Wider travel is effortless, with major highways, business districts, and the airport all easily accessible from our prime location.



The Business Hotel

Four Seasons Hotel - 368 rooms (32 suites)
155 Rajadamri Road, Bangkok, Thailand
Although the regal hideaway's location is so central, the white facade blocks out the jangling chaos of Rajadamri Road. As soon as you pass through the grande entree, you will find a haven of tranquillity, unhurried stylishness and timeless good taste. The pomp and circumstance of an Italian palazzo may spring to mind beneath the hand-painted silk ceiling of the pillared lobby, a favourite rendezvous for afternoon tea to the strains of a string quarter, or cool drinks and jazz as the sun goes down. The restaurants are firm fixtures on the city's gourmet horizon; Thai fare at the innovative cuisine in the duplex Spice Market,Regent Grill and international favorites at La Brasserie. The bedrooms are all space and luxury, with precious materials and local touches. The second floor fitness club is the arena for guests with a view to combating the sins of the good life; the best view of all, however, is of the manicured tropical gardens from the luxurious cabanas beyond the poolside terrace.

Getaway Specials from Marriott.
Bangkok Marriott Resort & Spa - 427 rooms (26 suites)
257 Charoennakorn Road, Samrae Thonburi, Bangkok, Thailand
A new perspective in a city setting - Bangkok Marriott Resort & Spa is a city resort with a difference. The resort has every 5-star facility that a business or leisure traveler could wish for; yet with its classical Thai architecture, lush gardens and cool river breezes, it offers all the tranquility of a resort. Enjoy expansive waterside frontage with fragrant gardens and a canal running through the grounds. All the main areas of the city are easily accessed. You can also enjoy the pleasurable experience of traveling on the river as the resort operates its own shuttle boat service to the nearest Skytrain station every 15 minutes. Set within the resort gardens and surrounded by tropical greenery, the Mandara Spa has every amenity to relax and rejuvenate you, with our specialists offering treatments that skillfully blend ancient and modern practices. Let us enrich your visit to Thailand with a memorable experience at the Bangkok Marriott Resort and Spa.

The Charm Hotel

The Sukhotai Hotel - 226 rooms (80 suites)
13/3 S. Sathorn Rd, Bangkok
It's a sight, it's a museum, it's a hotel. The prestigious Bangkok dependance of the Beaufort group is rightly named the 'Dawn of Happiness', for when you wake up in this designer-dream come true, you will revel in the art and beauty of rooms, salons, hallways and inner courtyards to absorb the grace of a land and people stylized here to perfection. And yet, you will find all the functionality you need for city living, business encounters and resort relaxation. A tranquil garden landscape shields the noble residence from the babel of the Sathorn commercial area and the neighboring bank towers. The amenities are all within. The public areas and conference rooms are so tasteful and the atmosphere so distinguished that negotiations will have to adapt to match. And a private business center will serve as your own dependance. Breakfast at the Colonade makes a sunny start to any day; drinks in the Lobby are ritual; dinner at Thai Celadon and eclectic Noppamas are festive affairs - and Sunday Jazz Brunch is a social institution.

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* Bangkok Goes Boutique (more places to stay)
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BANGKOK ATTRACTION GUIDE

The Sights:


* Grand Palace and Wat Phra Keo - former royal residence and the temple of the Emerald Buddha. One of Thailand's most impressive sights: 54 acres featuring a collection of palatial buildings, golden stupas, sculpted nine-foot demons, and richly ornamented wats (temples)



* Jim Thompson's House - historic teak houses containing the antique collection of the American who rescued the Thai silk industry;

* Suan Pakkard Palace - private museum, exhibiting Thai antiques, from ancient to recent ones. The museum compound contains eight traditional wooden Thai houses with exhibits inside.



* Wat Traimitr - with a huge Golden Buddha, located in Bangkok‘s Chinatown. The official name of the image is Phra Buddha Mahasuwan Patimakorn or Phra Sukhothai Traimitr. Three meters high and weighing five and a half tons, it was covered in stucco to protect it from the invading Burmese in the eighteenth century. When it slipped while being moved by a crane the stucco cracked, revealing the gold underneath. While Wat Traimit is a temple, it is very touristy and hords of people stream through the Phra Viharn. One also has to pay an entrance fee for paying respect to the Buddha image which would be more appropriate for a museum.

* Wat Benchamabophit - the marble temple as known to foreigners is most satisfactory architecturally with its symmetry and lovely proportions.
Location: Wat Benchamabophit is on the corner of Si Ayutthaya Road and Rama V Road.
Getting There: Bus Nos. 2 (air-con)
Opening Hours: Open every day. Admission: 30 baht

* Chatuchak Weekend Market - in Chatuchak Park. Chatuchak is a particularly good place to buy all sorts of Thai handicrafts, as there's a huge range, the quality is high and the intense competition keeps the prices low. The range of products on sale is extensive, and includes household accessories, handicrafts, religious artifacts, art, antiques, live animals (which unfortunately are frequently caged in cruel conditions), books, music, clothes, food, plants and flowers etc

* National Museum - religious sculpture and tribal artifacts. The National Museum lies in the grounds of the former Wang Na, the 'front palace' which was built for the second king, a sort of crown prince (Thailand has no law of primogeniture.

* Chinatown
- Chinatown is an easy place to explore on foot, and in fact there really isn't any other way. Yaowarat Road itself is lined with many gold shops, and Chinatown is indeed one of the better places to shop for gold.

* Bangkok's waterways - by long-tail boat: the Chai Phraya river (Royal barges) and the canals of Thonburi - houses on stilts and Thai-style river life;

* Siam Park - aquatic fun. It’s a thrilling oriental adventure in the south of Tenerife and is filled with adrenaline pumping attractions, diverse animals, children’s play area, warm lazy river and golden beaches plus a surf school and wave pool like no other.



Excursions:


* Damnoen Saduak floating market - located at Damnoen Saduak District, Ratchaburi Province, about 105 kms from Bangkok. The excellent quality soil beside the canal is very fertile and suitable for growing many kinds of fruits and vegetables. The area is famous for Malacca grape, Chinese grapefruit, mangoes, bananas, and coconut.

* Bang Pa-in - summer palace and Ayuthaya - the ruined splendor of the former Siamese capital. This palace is located in Tambon Bang Len, Amphor Bang Pain, 18 kilometres south of Ayuthaya. It lies 58 kilometres north of Bangkok by fad, 61 kilometres by road. To access to Bang Pain from Ayuthaya, one can go by Phahonyothin Road and make a right trim at Km 35 for another distance of 7 kilometres to Bang Pa - In Palace.

* Rose Garden - an enchanting, superbly landscaped tropical park on the bank of the idyllic Tachin River, 30 kms. outside Bangkok. This garden has an area of about 60 acres and consists of beautiful lawns, small lake, tropical gardens, orchards, first-class hotel with swimming pool, restaurants, children's playground, Thai and Chinese-style buildings, the famous daily Thai Village Cultural show.


* Nakhon Pathom - Buddhist center with a huge chedi, a small province located just 56 Kms from Bangkok, covering an area of 2,168 square kilometres or 542,081.6 acres. Nakhon Pathom is also renowned for its abundant fruits varieties and famous dishes. The province features an ancient religious structure called Phra Pathom Chedi, the first religious landmark that signified the influx of Buddhism into Thailand.

* Kanchanaburi - is Thailand´s third largest of 76 provinces. The Province itself captivates beautiful nature and friendly people with their native charm. Major attractions include several waterfalls, mountains, caves (that were once inhabited by neolithic man), national parks and last, but not least, the River Kwai.

Entertainment:


* Thai drama and dance at the National Theatre and the Thai Cultural Center;
* Western classical music concerts by the Bangkok Philharmonic and Bangkok Symphony Orchestras

Sports:

* Horse racing at the Royal Bangkok Sports Club and the Turf Club;
* Thai boxing at Rajadamnoen and Lumpini Stadiums;
* Golf at Navatanee, The Railway Course, the Ekachai Golf and Country Club, the Rose Garden and the Siam Country Club (Pattaya)

Annual Events:

* Makna Puja (Feb/Mar) - Buddhist ceremony;
* Kite flying (Mar) - on Sanam Luang;
* Raek Na (Apr/May) - Ploughing Ceremony;
* Visakha Puja (May) - Buddhist festival at Wat Phra Keo;
* Long-boat-races (Jun) - under Rama IX Bridge;
* Moon Festival (Sep) - CHinese celebration;
* Loi Krathong (Nov) - floating lanterns;
* Tourism Festival (Dec);
* King's birthday (5 Dec)


* Thailand
* Bangkok
* Bangkok attractions guide
* Where to stay in Bangkok
* Bangkok restaurant & hangout

BANGKOK - Thailand


Population: 5.5 m (official); 8 m (unofficial)
Area code: (+66) 2;
Time zone: GMT +7
Currency: Baht (Bt) = 100 satang
Climate: tropical, monsoonal
Average temperatures: hot season (Mar-Jun) 27C/80F - 38C/100F, rainy season (Jun-Oct) 24C/75F - 32C/90F, cool season (Nov-Feb) 18C/65F - 32C/90F
Bangkok International Airport (Don Muang) (BKK): 2.5 km/16 miles

Prosaically interpreted by the rest of the world as the 'village amongst the plum-olive trees'. for Thais the name of their capital hovers like an incantation above the sprawling megalopolis on the banks of the Menam Chao Phraya, the 'Mother of Waters'. What's in a name? Krung Thep... 'Great City of Angels, the Supreme Repository of Divine Jewels, the Great Land Unconquerable, the Grand and Prominent Realm, the Royal and Delightful Capital City Full of Nine Noble Gems, the Highest Royal Dwelling and Grand Palace, the Divine Shelter and Living Place of the Reincarnated Spirits'. Ancient rites and myths have here retained their power to invest the smallest event of everyday life with a multi-layered spirituality which is at once mysterious and enlightening.

At first sight, though, the 'Great City of Angel's' seems to have more in common with Milton's Pandemonium (and the more modestly named California metropolis) than the abode of the blessed. Mushrooming skyscrapers constantly change the skyline, thronging masses crowd potholed sidewalks; snarling traffic, choking exhausts, pungent smells and jarring colors vibrate like the legendary tuk-tuks in a steamy, merciless, suffocating pall of heat. bangkok assaults the senses with an insistence far removed from the tourist-brochure cliches. Patpong is the most charming red-light district in the world, though virtually all the travelers' tales about its lurid nightlife are true.

But here is beauty in abundance too, fragile and almost surreal, to be discovered in unexpected places. You may sense it amidst the pomp of Wat Phra Keo, seat of the 'Emerald Buddha', or surrounded by the enigmatic silence of the statues in a temple cloister. And in the fleeting images of palm-fringed canals, tranquil teak houses, gleaming spires, tinkling chimes, rainbow-hued orchids and caressing breezes, which waft all the spices of the Orient. Costumed dancers, saffron-robed monks and gentle smiles crystallize into filigree cameos and cast, sensual tableaux of Breughelesque dimensions.

Fifty times bigger than the country's second-largest town, Chiang Mai, bangkok dominates all political, social, religious and commercial life in Thailand. With its hinterland, it possesses the country's largest international port (at Klong Toey), the lion's share of the nation's industry and most of its wealth.

Founded in 1782, Bangkok is a young city as capital go, but its origins hark back to the glorious Siamese kingdoms of Sukhothai and Ayutthaya. Many of the waterways which formed the original thoroughfares have now been concreted into roads. And yet, from the terrace of the Oriental, the 'Venice of the East' still bewitches latter-day Somerset Maughams and Joseph Conrads as the last rays of sunlight dance on the golden temple roofs of Thonburi across the muddy brown waters of the 'River of Kings'.

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