Bangkok Guide



Bangkok Thailand

A foreigner's reaction to Thailand's capital is often as confused as the city's geography. Bangkok has no downtown, and streets, like the traffic, seem to veer off in every direction. There's even confusion about the city's name: though to Thais it is Krung Thep, the City of Angels, foreigners call it Bangkok. The oldest quarter clusters along the eastern bank of the Chao Phraya River, which snakes between Bangkok and Thonburi, where the capital was first established after the fall of Ayutthaya in 1767. When King Rama I moved his capital in 1782 across the river, he chose a site that foreign vessels knew from their navigational charts as the village of Bangkok. This settlement -- dominated by the Grand Palace and bordered by the Chao Phraya and semicircular klongs (canals) -- is called Ratanakosin and is today a jumble of streets that lead to palaces, government buildings, temples, and museums.

In the last 25 years, the city has changed enormously. Before Bangkok became the destination for American servicemen during the Vietnam War, it had a population of 1.5 million. Then, as U.S. dollars attracted the rural poor and development began, it grew to more than 10 million, nearly 15% of the population and 40 times the size of any other city in Thailand.
Nowadays, space in which to live and breathe is inadequate. Bangkok is infamous for its traffic-jammed streets and sois (side streets and alleys), and its air pollution is among the worst in the world (policemen directing traffic wear masks). When the economy collapsed in 1997 the traffic situation improved as people sold their cars instead of driving them, and the population shrunk as many returned to the countryside.
But as the economy bounces back so does congestion. The skytrain, which opened in December 1999, makes some difference, and a subway system scheduled to open in 2002 should help. However, some streets, particularly Sukhumvit Road and other major arteries, still look like parking lots during much of the day, and as construction reawakens with the reviving economy, the traffic will only get worse. Even with its growing pains, though, Bangkok gives you a sense of history and timelessness, perhaps because King Rama I set out to build a city as beautiful as old Ayutthaya before the Burmese sacked it. Bangkok's contrasts require an adjustment on your part, but amid the chaos you soon come to appreciate the gentle nature of the Thais and their genuine respect for other people.

Things to See

Grand Palace
Grand Palace is open daily from 8.30am-3.30pm. The only entrance and exit to the complex is in the middle. On the right are the offices.Grand Palace is open daily from 8.30am-3.30pm. The only entrance and exit to the complex is in the middle. On the right are the offices of the Royal Household, to the left is the ticket booth.

The first stop within the palace grounds is Wat Phra Kaeo (Temple of the Emerald Buddha), a shrine for Thai Buddhists that is comparable in religious importance to Mecca or St Peter's. Passing though the gate, you will confront 6-metre-tall (20-ft) demon statues inspired by the Ramakien, the Thai version of the Indian epic Ramayana. You must walk the glittering length of the bot to reach its entrance. In front are scattered Chinese-style statues, which function as stand-ins for incense offerings to the Emerald Buddha inside. The 75-cm-tall (30-inch) jadeite statue is perched high on an altar near the opposite wall, clothed and enclosed in a glass case, and shielded by a towering nine-tiered umbrella.

Exiting from the Grand Palace, turn left on Thanon Maharat and walk south past Thanon Thai Wang, which runs into the Tha Tien river-taxi dock after passing a fresh market surrounded by turn-of-the century shophouses.

What else to see
Wat Arun
Wat Po's Reclining Buddha
National Museum
Golden Pig and Wat Ratchabophit
Wat Suthat and the Giant Swing
National Assembly and Vimarnmek
Dusit Zoo
Chitralada Palace
Marble Temple

Also- Chatuchak weekend market

Bangkok areas
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Rate $ 105
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