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Sanam Pao BTS station

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BTS Sanam Pao Station
BTS Sanam Pao Station

Sanam Pao station (Thai: สถานีสนามเป้า, pronounced [sā.tʰǎː.nīː sā.nǎːm pâw]) is a BTS skytrain station, on the Sukhumvit Line in Phaya Thai District, Bangkok, Thailand. The station is on Phahon Yothin Road near Soi Phahon Yothin 3 in Sanam Pao area, among office towers, an army base, and the site of Royal Thai Army Radio and Television Channel 5.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Sanam Pao BTS station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Sanam Pao BTS station
Phahon Yothin Road, Bangkok Phaya Thai District

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Sanam Pao BTS stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 13.772622222222 ° E 100.54209166667 °
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Address

สนามเป้า

Phahon Yothin Road
10400 Bangkok, Phaya Thai District
Bangkok, Thailand
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BTS Sanam Pao Station
BTS Sanam Pao Station
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Nearby Places

Ari, Bangkok
Ari, Bangkok

Ari, also spelled Aree (Thai: อารีย์, pronounced [ʔaː.riː]), is a soi (alley) and residential neighbourhood in Bangkok, Thailand. Today, it is a trendy area popular among younger generations, especially teenagers and young adults. The area is lined with stylish cafés and bakeries, modern restaurants, and leading community-style mall. It is also home to various government offices, including the Ministry of Finance, the State Audit Office, the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment, and the Public Relations Department. Most of these offices are located toward the end of the soi. The neighbourhood lies within the Phaya Thai district, centered around Soi Ari (Phahonyothin Soi 7), in an area locally known as Sanam Pao. It has been featured by a number of media outlets including Bloomberg News as one of the best neighbourhoods to travel to in Bangkok, and The New York Times as one of the 47 best in the world. At the entrance of Soi Ari is Ari station (N5), a BTS Skytrain station located above Phahonyothin Road. The station provides convenient access to the neighbourhood. According to those who lived in this area during the 1950s and 1960s, it was once a quiet residential neighbourhood for aristocrats, old families, and high-ranking government officials. It had yet to become the bustling commercial district it is today. Development in the area began as part of Bangkok's urban expansion outward from the city center, especially after the extension of Phahonyothin Road, turning this neighbourhood into part of the city's new frontier. Back then, local businesses were simple and modest, mainly small eateries and traditional coffee shops. There were no upscale restaurants or trendy venues. The site where the headquarters of Kasikornbank (KBank) now stands was once just an open vegetable garden. Located in the Ari is Suan Bua School, a long-established kindergarten and primary school. Even though most of the students lived nearby, school buses were still provided. Baan Yoswadi, one of the area's first condominium buildings was founded by Thanpuying Yosawadi Ampornapisarn in the late 1970s. It is considered one of the earliest condominiums in Thailand and is still in operation today. Ari Samphan is another nearby soi located near the end of Soi Ari, alongside the Khlong Prapa (water supply canal). It contains several small lanes and provides a connection to Soi Ratchakhru, also known as Phahonyothin Soi 5.

Santiphap Park
Santiphap Park

Santiphap Park (Thai: สวนสันติภาพ, RTGS: Suan Santiphap, literally "Peace Park") is an 8-acre (0.032 km2) park in Bangkok, Thailand. It is located between Ratchawithi Road and Rang Nam Road in Ratchathewi district. The land on which Santiphap Park is built is leased from the Crown Property Bureau by the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA). It was previously the site of subsidized housing overseen by the National Housing Authority. The BMA obtained a 30-year lease, beginning in October 1990. Construction on the park began in 1997.Santiphap Park was opened to the public on August 18, 1998. The name Santiphap, meaning "peace", as well as the date of the park's opening, commemorate the end of World War II, which took place 53 years earlier.The dove is the symbol of Santiphap Park. A blackened bronze sculpture situated in the park's central pond depicts a dove carrying in its beak an olive branch with five blossoms, representing the spread of peace throughout the world. The sculpture is based on a drawing by Pablo Picasso.The entrance signs to Santiphap Park are a facsimile of the handwriting of Buddhadasa Bhikkhu, a renowned Buddhist monk, philosopher and pacifist. Over 30 species of birds have been recorded in the park since its creation. Birds most often seen or heard there: feral pigeon, spotted dove, zebra dove, plaintive cuckoo, common koel, coppersmith barbet, Asian palm-swift, streak-eared bulbul, black-naped oriole, large-billed crow, oriental magpie-robin, pied fantail, black-collared starling, Asian pied starling, common myna, white-vented myna, olive-backed sunbird, scarlet-backed flowerpecker, Eurasian tree sparrow. Common winter (October–March) visitors: barn swallow, red-breasted flycatcher, inornate warbler. Species which are seen there less often (but all year round): striated heron, Javan pond-heron, little egret, painted stork, house swift, common iora, common tailorbird, yellow-vented bulbul, red-whiskered bulbul, house sparrow. Less common winter visitors: Chinese pond-heron, ashy drongo, brown shrike, Asian paradise-flycatcher. In the wasteland on which the park was later constructed, white-breasted waterhen, black-capped kingfisher, and verditer flycatcher were also recorded. Much more unusually for central Bangkok, orange-headed thrush and laced woodpecker have been recorded in a quieter condominium garden 50 m from the park. The park contains a public address system which is used to broadcast a numbered list of park rules at 07:00, 08:00, 15:00, and 18:00; the national anthem at 08:00 and 18:00; and Thai music 07:00-10:00 and 15:00-18:00 most days. The rules and anthem are often audible from over a block away. Complaints by local residents have been ignored by the park management. The central circular paved area in the park is used for aerobics 18:00-18:45, weather permitting. Santiphap Park is open from 05:00 until 21:00, and is used by 2–3,000 people on working days, and 3–4,000 on holidays.