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The Grand Hyatt Erawan replaced the government-owned Erawan Hotel, which had been established on the southeast corner of Ratchaprasong Intersection in 1956. One of Bangkok's top luxury hotels in the 1960s, by the 1980s the Erawan was unable to keep up with competition from private enterprises, and The Syndicate of Thai Hotels and Tourists Enterprises, the state-owned company that operated the ...
"Erawan's Bt10-bn five-year plan to focus on Hop Inn chain". The Nation. Archived from the original on February 11, 2016; Chinmaneevong, Chadamas (2016-02-11). "Erawan plans B10bn expansion of hotels". Bangkok Post "Complete market coverage the key for Erawan". Bangkok Post. 2015-07-31
The 2018 edition was the inaugural edition of the Michelin Guide in Thailand, initially only covering Bangkok. Bangkok was the seventh Asian city/region to have a dedicated Red Guide, after Tokyo, Hong Kong & Macau, Osaka & Kyoto, Singapore, Shanghai and Seoul. Since then, Michelin Guide Thailand expanded its coverage to Phuket, Phang-Nga ...
Erawan is the Khmer and Thai name of the mythological elephant Airavata. The name may also refer to: Erawan Hotel, a former hotel in Bangkok; Erawan Shrine, a shrine to the god Brahma in Bangkok, located at the hotel; Grand Hyatt Erawan, a hotel in Bangkok, replacing the Erawan; The Erawan Group, a Thai hospitality company which owns the new hotel
Ratchaprasong junction and the Erawan Shrine, January 2015 Ratchaprasong (light green) adjacent to Siam District (yellow) in Pathum Wan. Ratchaprasong (Thai: ราชประสงค์, pronounced [râːt.t͡ɕʰā.prā.sǒŋ]; also spelled Rajprasong) is the name of an intersection, and a shopping district named after it, in Pathum Wan District, Bangkok, adjacent to the Siam area, at the ...
A fact from Grand Hyatt Erawan Bangkok appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 3 October 2021 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows: The text of the entry was as follows:
In December 2017, the Michelin Guide released its inaugural 2018 edition for Bangkok, in which the restaurant was awarded one star. It was the only street restaurant to be awarded a star, and joins a handful of others in Hong Kong and Singapore as a result of Michelin's efforts to diversify its coverage, previously limited to fine dining ...
Mark Wiens: Ridiculously Creamy Shrimp and Khao San Road (ต้มยำกุ้ง อร่อยมาก) – Bangkok Day 1 YouTube video; Asian Street Food: Thai Street Food – Street Food in Thailand – Bangkok Street Food 2016 YouTube video; Trusted online guide to Bangkok's best street food vendors - 2021