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Patpong gets its name from the family that owns much of the area's property. Luang Patpongpanich (or Patpongpanit), an immigrant from Hainan Island, China, purchased the area in 1946. [4] At that time it was an undeveloped plot of land on the outskirts of the city. [5] A small klong (canal) and a teakwood house were the only features. The ...
Walking Street, Pattaya; Washington Square (Bangkok) This page was last edited on 24 June 2023, at 20:29 (UTC). Text is ... Category: Red-light districts in Thailand.
Nana Plaza (formerly Nana Entertainment Plaza) is an entertainment complex and red-light district in Bangkok, Thailand.Originally built as a shopping center, Nana Plaza occupies a three-story commercial building in the Khlong Toei District of Bangkok about 300 metres (330 yd) from the BTS Skytrain's Nana Station.
Patpong Night Market is a night bazaar in well-known red-light district Patpong neighbourhood in downtown Bangkok. Patpong is a popular entertainment district located in the namesake soi (alley) of Silom road. One of the most important commercial zones of Bangkok. During the day, it is full of office workers and street hawkers.
Manningham – the red light district is situated around Lumb Lane and Manningham Lane and was featured in the TV series Band of Gold. [250] Huddersfield. Great Northern Street [251] Leeds. Chapeltown – the traditional red light-area was around the Spencer Place and Avenue Hill streets. This has diminished in importance since the emergence of ...
Lights in front of Amarin Plaza at Ratchaprasong Traffic jam at Siam Square Inside Hua Lamphong (main railway station in Bangkok) Ban Krua; Banthat Thong; Bon Kai; Charoen Phon; Chit Lom; Chula; Hua Lamphong; Lang Suan; Suphachalasai (National Stadium) Phloen Chit; Phra Ram 1; Ratchadamri; Ratchaprasong; Sam Yan; Saphan Lueang; Siam Square ...
The “police station” built in a few days from an old retail unit in Surawong, central Bangkok, is so realistic from the outside that several pedestrians stop and stare, perhaps wondering if ...
Bangkok is subdivided into 50 districts (khet, เขต, pronounced, also sometimes wrongly called amphoe as in the other provinces, derived from Pali khetta, cognate to Sanskrit kṣetra), which are further subdivided into 180 subdistricts (khwaeng, แขวง, pronounced [kʰwɛ̌ːŋ]), roughly equivalent to tambon in the other provinces.