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Nonthaburi Province Stadium

Buildings and structures in Nonthaburi provinceFootball venues in ThailandMulti-purpose stadiums in ThailandSport in Nonthaburi provinceThailand sports venue stubs
Nonthaburi Province Stadium 20180310 02
Nonthaburi Province Stadium 20180310 02

Nonthaburi Province Stadium, Nonthaburi Sports Complex Stadium (Thai: สนามกีฬาจังหวัดนนทบุรี "นนทบุรี สปอร์ต คอมเพล็กซ์") is a multi-purpose stadium in Nonthaburi Province , Thailand. It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home stadium of Nonthaburi. The stadium holds 10,000 people.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Nonthaburi Province Stadium (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Nonthaburi Province Stadium
Bang Len Soi 27, Bang Len Subdistrict

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 13.850712 ° E 100.441408 °
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Address

Bang Len Soi 27
11140 Bang Len Subdistrict
Nonthaburi Province, Thailand
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Nonthaburi Province Stadium 20180310 02
Nonthaburi Province Stadium 20180310 02
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Wat Prang Luang
Wat Prang Luang

Wat Prang Luang (Thai: วัดปรางค์หลวง, pronounced [wát prāːŋ lǔaŋ]) is an ancient Thai Buddhist temple in Nonthaburi province, it can be considered as the oldest monastery and archaeological site in Nonthaburi and Bangkok Metropolitan Region. It is situated along Khlong Om Non, also known as Khlong Bangkok Noi.The temple previously called "Wat Luang" (วัดหลวง, "royal temple") was presumably built in the reign of King Ramathibodi I (U-Thong), the first monarch and founder of Ayutthaya Kingdom more than 650 years ago. Believing that its location was his residence after the cholera evacuation before the establishment of Ayutthaya Kingdom. Later in the Rattanakosin period, Vajirananavarorasa, the 10th Supreme Patriarch of Thailand, found that prang (chedi in Khmer-style) was built at the same time as the temple. Then he changed the temple's name to "Wat Prang Luang," which has an ancient prang as a landmark and symbol. The prang is old and dilapidated; it has been archaeologically proven to date back to the early Ayutthaya period with a different structure than the other prangs of the same period. A principal Buddha image in Māravijaya attitude has 9 meters (29 ft) width lap named "Luang Pho U-Thong" is enshrined in the ordination hall. It is considered a sacred Buddha image and is highly revered by Buddhists, both local and outsiders. Every Monday evening, the abbot holds a prayer activity every week.

Maha Chesadabodindranusorn Bridge
Maha Chesadabodindranusorn Bridge

Maha Chesadabodindranusorn Bridge (Thai: สะพานมหาเจษฎาบดินทรานุสรณ์, RTGS: Saphan Mahachetsadabodinthranuson, pronounced [sa.pʰāːn ma.hǎː.t͡ɕèːt.sa.dāː.bɔ̄(ː).dīn.tʰrāː.nú.sɔ̌ːn]) is an extradosed bridge in area of Mueang Nonthaburi District in Nonthaburi Province, Thailand, over the Chao Phraya River. The bridge is the first extradosed bridge in Thailand. It is located between Phra Nangklao Bridge (upstream) and Rama V Bridge (downstream), connects Nonthaburi 1 Road, on the east side of the river, and Bang Si Mueang - Wat Bot Don Phrom Road and Ratchaphruek Road, on the west side of the river. The bridge was named after King Nangklao, one of whose titles before his accession to the throne was "Prince Chesadabodin".The project has a total length of approximately 4.3 kilometres (2.7 mi), consisting of an interchange at Nonthaburi 1 Road, a 6-lane extradosed concrete bridge with 200 metres (660 ft) long main span and the total length of 460 metres (1,510 ft), an intersection at Bang Si Mueang - Wat Bot Don Phrom Road, and a 6-lane at-grade road to an interchange at Ratchaphruek Road. Construction began in May 2012, after having been delayed for two years, and took around thirty months. It is a part of the completed main road linking network developed by the Department of Rural Roads (DRR) in the area on the west side of the river, to ease the traffic on Rama V Bridge, Phra Nangklao Bridge and Rama IV Bridge.