News / Articles >> Chinatown Bangkok
By: Eric Lam
Chinatown Bangkok was started when King Rama I decided in 1782
to establish the new capital Bangkok on the eastern bank of the Chao Phraya
River. The Chinese immigrants who were originally settled in the area that is
now the Grand Palace had to move out to a strip of land a kilometer down the
river.
Over the years the settlement grew. Today, Chinatown Bangkok or Yaowarat covers
a square bounded by Phadung Krung Kasem Canal to the east, the Ong Ang Canal to
the west, Luang Road to the north and the Chao Phraya River to the south, an
area of about 2 sq km.
The casual visitor to Chinatown would probably only have the time and energy to
cover the main street Yaowarat Road where most of the activities are
concentrated. The other road of interest is Rachawong Road which is off Yaowarat
Road.
If you are coming to Chinatown by road the most convenient way to start your
tour of this Bangkok legacy is to take the subway to the Hua Lam Phong station
located on the eastern bank of the Phadung Krung Kasem Canal. Nearby is the Hua
Lam Phong railway station from which trains travel to every part of Thailand.
Across the road from the train station is Traimit Road where the famous Wat
Traimit or Temple of the Golden Buddha stands. This wat houses a 3 m high Buddha
made of more than 5 tonnes of gold!
Within the same compound as Wat Traimit, is the Saphanthawong Museum a community
museum dedicated to the early Chinese immigrants in Bangkok.
Outside the main entrance of Wat Traimit is a traffic island on which stands a
huge Chinese arched gate, the Odeon Gate, built in 1999 to mark the 72nd
birthday of King Bhumipol, the present king. This gate marks the start of
Yaowarat Road and the walking tour of the rest of Chinatown.
Yaowarat Road, the main street in Chinatown Bangkok, was built in the reign of
King Rama V. The crowded street winds through bustling heart of Chinatown like a
mythical dragon rearing its head at the Odeon Gate. Shop signs in both Thai and
Chinese give the visitor a clear indication that he's in Chinatown.
The street is lined with ubiquitous goldsmith shops, sharks' fin and birds nest
restaurants, shops and vendors selling Chinese herbal medicine, dried mushrooms,
salted fish, roast duck, Chinese calendars, almanacs and of course, lottery
tickets. The avid bargain hunter would have a ball a time browsing through the
shops and stalls.
Every year during the Chinese New Year, Yaowarat Road is closed to traffic for
street festivities, lion dances and food fairs. A member of the royal family
attends the occasion every year much to the joy and pride of the Yaowarat
community.
Most of the bigger hotels in Chinatown are located along Yaowarat Road. The most
prominent however is the Grand China Princess at the Ratchawong junction, right
in the heart of Chinatown, overlooking the old city and the Chao Phraya.
About a kilometer down Yaowarat Road turn left into Ratchawong Road another
street full of vendors selling everything from stickers, deep-fried snacks to
roasted chestnuts. Ratchawong Road has two significant landmarks in Chinatown.
Fifty meters after turning into Rachawong Road you'll encounter a tall Chinese
arch to a narrow soi on the left. During the Lunar New Year in 2004, this soi,
Soi Phalittaphon, was renamed Soi Sun Yat Sen, after the father of the Chinese
revolution who visited Chinatown Bangkok in 1908, during his tour of South East
Asia to raise money from the overseas Chinese for the revolution.
Walking through this narrow soi, the visitor would have to cope with the crowds
of shoppers and the frequent passage of vehicles. The shops and stalls along
this packed soi sell a wide variety of goods and even Christmas trees.
Further along Rachawong Road is an even narrower soi to the right. The soi is so
congested that it's barely passable to human traffic. Packed with stalls on
either side, it would take a very determined shopper to weave his way through.
It's difficult to imagine that this is the famous Soi Sampheng or Soi Wanit
where the original Chinese settlers first moved in and started Chinatown in
1782.
At the end of Rachawong Road is the Rachawong Pier on the Chao Phraya River. If
you are coming by boat, this is the pier to alight and start your of Chinatown
in reverse. If you have arrived by road, you may wish to leave by boat for a
change.
A tour of Chinatown Bangkok provides a fascinating insight into a very different
way of life. The busy streets are a melting pot of communities engaging in trade
and commerce at every level – a legacy of the early Chinese immigrants and their
enterprise.
Chinatown Bangkok is one of the old treasures in
Tour Bangkok Legacies,
a historical travel site on renowned places preserved for posterity, the
momentous events surrounding these places and the legendary figures who left
these legacies in the landscape of Bangkok. The author Eric Lim, a free-lance
writer, lives in Bangkok Thailand.