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  2. Lam Phaya Floating Market - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lam_Phaya_Floating_Market

    Lam Phaya Floating Market is located on the Lam playa, Banglane, Nakornphratom province. "Lam Phaya" is the name of the village when they are still Bangpla, Nakornchaisri province. [clarification needed] In the King Rama 5th period, Phraya Kromta canalized the back of the market for the farmer to do agriculture. This area was separated into two ...

  3. Suan Pakkad Palace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suan_Pakkad_Palace

    Suan Pakkad Palace or Suan Pakkard Palace (Thai: สวนผักกาด, RTGS: Suan Phak Kat, pronounced [sǔan pʰàk kàːt]) is a museum in Bangkok, Thailand. It is located on Sri Ayutthaya Road, south of the Victory Monument. The museum has Thai antiques on display, including Ban Chiang pottery which is over 4,000

  4. Saphan Khwai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saphan_Khwai

    Saphan Khwai (Thai: สะพานควาย, pronounced [sā.pʰāːn kʰwāːj]) is an intersection and neighbourhood in the overlapping areas of Phaya Thai and Sam Sen Nai subdistricts in Phaya Thai District, Bangkok, Thailand. The surrounding neighbourhood is studded with many apartments and is best known for its many shops and markets.

  5. Bamrung Chat Satsana Ya Thai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bamrung_Chat_Satsana_Ya_Thai

    Front facade of Bamrungchat Satsana Yathai or Baan Mowaan. Bamrungchat Satsana Yathai (Thai: บำรุงชาติสาสนายาไทย) or familiarly known as Ban Mowaan (บ้านหมอหวาน) is a traditional Thai medicine store and historic building located at 9, Soi Thesa, Bamrung Mueang Road, Wat Ratchabophit Subdistrict, Phra Nakhon District, Bangkok.

  6. Victory Monument BTS station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victory_Monument_BTS_Station

    The station is located on Phaya Thai Road to the south of the Victory Monument, one of the landmark and major traffic intersection of Bangkok. The station is linked to all four corners of the traffic circle by a skybridge which almost traverses around the monument.

  7. Phaya Thai district - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phaya_Thai_District

    A new Ratchathewi district was created by carving off the southern part of Phaya Thai in 1989. [5] In 1993, some eastern parts were moved out of the district to the newly-formed Din Daeng, [6] leaving Phaya Thai with only one remaining sub-district, Sam Sen Nai. Due to the split off of Ratchathewi, Phaya Thai Road is no longer in Phaya Thai ...

  8. Thung Phaya Thai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thung_Phaya_Thai

    The area is bordered by neighbouring subdistricts (from north clockwise): Phaya Thai and, Sam Sen Nai in Phaya Thai District (Khlong Sam Sen is a borderline), Makkasan, and Thanon Phetchaburi in its district (Phaya Thai Road and Si Ayutthaya Road are the borderlines), Suan Chitlada in Dusit District (Northern Railway Line is a borderline). [6]

  9. Sam Yan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_Yan

    Sam Yan Intersection is where Rama IV (which runs in a roughly east-west direction) meets Phaya Thai Road to the north and Si Phraya Road to the southwest. Originally consisting only of an at-grade intersection, the Thai–Japan Flyover Bridge, constructed in 1992, now allows Rama IV traffic to bypass Sam Yan, as well as the eastward Henri Dunant and Sala Daeng intersections.