Moving to Bangkok

 

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Bangkok information

Moving  Bangkok

Bangkok Thai Krung Thep, city (1990 pop. 8,538,610), capital of Thailand and of Bangkok prov., SW Thailand, on the east bank of the Chao Phraya River, near the Gulf of Thailand. Thailand's largest city and one of the leading cities of Southeast Asia, Bangkok lies in the heart of the country's major commercial rice-growing region. The metropolitan area includes Bangkok proper, the industrial city of Thon Buri on the west bank of the river, and Klongtoi Wharf, c.5 mi (8 km) downstream, which, along with Bangkok's artificial harbor, handles the bulk of Thailand's foreign trade. The city is the hub of a continental Southeast Asian railroad network and has modern highways; congestion on its roads led to the opening of an elevated light-rail system in 1999. Its nearby international airport is one of the busiest in Asia. Despite these transportation facilities, Bangkok depends mainly on its numerous canals to carry the commercial produce of the surrounding area. Processed food, wood, and textiles are leading exports. Industrial plants include rice mills, cement factories, sawmills, oil refineries, and shipyards. Textiles, motor vehicles, electrical goods, and food products are also manufactured. The city is a famous jewelry trading center, dealing in silver and bronze ware and precious stones. Ethnic Chinese dominate both commerce and industry in Bangkok, whose population includes sizable Indian, Pakistani, European, and American communities.It is hot and steamy, overcrowded, traffic choked and filthy, yet Bangkok remains the singular most popular Asian holiday destination. It is a city of contradictions – it's people are deeply religious yet it has possibly the seediest and most debauched nightlife in the world. They are avid royalists yet most live in poverty. Dirt and disease are everywhere yet their cuisine is amongst the healthiest in the world. They suffer flooding, sweltering heat and chronic pollution problems yet they are amongst the happiest, friendliest and polite folk you could ever wish to meet. In many ways it is Bangkok’s paradoxical lifestyle that makes the city so appealing. More than most Asian cities, it holds a fascination for westerners, puzzled by a nation that has embraced so much of western capitalist society only to see it for what it really is… a means to an end. The market stalls and vendors may well be stacked high with dodgy designer gear, counterfeit computer software, CDs, videos and electrical goods. But unlike western consumer society, the Thai’s veneration is strictly reserved for things of a far more spiritual nature.

Bangkok is undoubtedly one of Asia’s most exciting cities, but despite the relentless bustle and almost deafening racket of the main streets there, it remains surprisingly full of quiet oases where you can relax and soak up the often stunning beauty. There are 400 Wats (temples/monasteries) scattered throughout the city. The most important are situated within the area known as Thonburi, which is the oldest district and formerly Thailand’s capital itself. It is in this area that you’ll discover Bangkok’s most spectacular buildings. The Grand Palace is an awesome sight indeed, the complex covering 945,000m of grounds and containing over 100 buildings that date from 1782, the first year of Bangkok rule. Built in traditional Thai architecture mixed with European designs, the Palace was once home to the Kings of Siam. Today it is used for only a few ceremonial occasions by the King himself.

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