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Rajamangala Stadium

1998 establishments in ThailandAFC Asian Cup stadiumsAthletics (track and field) venues in ThailandBang Kapi districtFootball venues in Thailand
National stadiumsPages with Thai IPASports venues completed in 1998Sports venues in BangkokStadiums of the Asian Games
Rajamangala Stadium in Bangkok
Rajamangala Stadium in Bangkok

The Rajamangala National Stadium (Thai: ราชมังคลากีฬาสถาน; RTGS: Ratchamangkhala Kila Sathan, pronounced [râːt.t͡ɕʰā.māŋ.kʰā.lāː kīː.lāː sā.tʰǎːn]) is the national stadium of Thailand. It is part of the Hua Mak Sports Complex, and is located in Hua Mak Subdistrict, Bang Kapi, Bangkok. It officially opened on 6 December 1998 during the 1998 Asian Games opening.

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

Rajamangala Stadium
Ramkhamhaeng Road,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Rajamangala StadiumContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 13.7554 ° E 100.6227 °
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Address

ศูนย์กีฬาหัวหมาก

Ramkhamhaeng Road 286
10240 , Bang Kapi District
Bangkok, Thailand
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Rajamangala Stadium in Bangkok
Rajamangala Stadium in Bangkok
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Rama IX Road
Rama IX Road

Rama IX Road, also written as Rama 9 Road (Thai: ถนนพระราม 9, RTGS: Thanon Phra Ram Kao) is one main road in east Bangkok. It starts at Rama IX Intersection, where Ratchadaphisek meet Asok-Din Daeng Roads and acted a boundary between Din Daeng and Huai Khwang Districts, then eastward through Watthana Tham Junction, through the crossroad of Pradit Manutham and intersects with Ramkhamhaeng Road in Bang Kapi District to the end at Srinakarin Interchange, the starting point of Srinakarin Road in the area of Suan Luang District, Motorway 7 (commonly known as Motorway) is a continuous route. Total distance is about 8.7 km (5.4 mi).The phase between Ramkhamhaeng Intersection to Srinakarin Interchange, it has the status of National Highway 343, formerly under the supervision of the Department of Highways. Currently under the supervision of Bangkok (BMA). The distance from the crossing of Khlong Chuad Yai, it runs parallel to the Si Rat Expressway in form of frontage road all the route. Its named in honour of King Bhumibol Adulyadej (Rama IX) (reigning 1946–2016). It is regarded as one of the Rama Series Road, consisting of Rama I, Rama II, Rama III, Rama IV, Rama V, Rama VI, and Rama IX is the last.The road was opened in 1978 under the unofficial name "Liap Khlong Samsen Fang Nuea Road" (ถนนเลียบคลองสามเสนฝั่งเหนือ, "northern Samsen waterside road").Rama IX Road is considered to be one of Bangkok's nightlife spots like the neighbouring Ratchadaphisek Road, especially in the 1990s (before 1997 Asian financial crisis) many nightclubs were operating on this road. They are known among Thai people as "café".Bordering the road are Phra Ram 9 MRT station, MCOT Public Company Limited (MCOT), Government Housing Bank (GH Bank), Mass Rapid Transit Authority of Thailand (MRTA), Royal City Avenue (RCA), Rama IX Super Tower, etc.