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Tenants of River City Bangkok are 60 percent art and antique shops, 20 percent lifestyle shops specialized in leather work, silks, tailored suits, furniture and home décor, and 20 percent restaurants and cafes, totalling to 160 shops. The four floors are arranged by categories of goods and services. The RCB Artery Zone is designed to host events.
Index Living Mall Ransit Branch. Index Living Mall Public Company Limited is a Thailand-based furniture retailer owned by Index Interfurn Group.With a concept of a "special mall" entirely devoted to displaying and selling the company's furniture, the company opened its first branch in December 2002 at Future Park Rangsit in suburban Bangkok.
On 3 April 1980, Modernform Group was established as Modernform Furniture to manufacture and distribute office furniture under brand Modernform Workplace. In 1980, Modernform started manufacturing and marketing office furniture, and subsequently expanded its business scope to cover residential furniture and kitchen units under brands Modernform ...
A real gem in the north of the city is Papaya Design & Furniture Studio, the largest vintage furniture emporium in South East Asia. ... The other unmissable (and Lego-looking) high-rise is Bangkok ...
MBK Center Atrium. Thailand portal; Architecture portal; MBK Center (Thai: เอ็มบีเค เซ็นเตอร์), previously known as Mahbunkhrong Center (Thai: มาบุญครอง เซ็นเตอร์, RTGS: Mabunkhrong, pronounced [māː.būn.kʰrɔ̄ːŋ]), is a large shopping mall in Bangkok, Thailand. [1]
Though furniture from the brand doesn’t come cheap, we do recommend keeping tabs on the brand during major sales events like Presidents’ Day, Labor Day, Black Friday and more, because it ...
Siam Paragon includes a range of specialty stores and restaurants as well as a multiplex (16 large screen cinemas), the Sea Life Bangkok Ocean World aquarium, an exhibition hall, the Thai Art Gallery, and an opera concert hall. It also has a bowling alley and karaoke centre.
King Power – Thai duty-free store that used to operate on the sixth floor of Zone A. It closed in June 2006 to make way for the expansion of the ZEN department store (now Central Department Store). Major Cineplex – former cineplex boasting six screens and 24 bowling lanes. It closed after SF World Cinema opened, in January 2008.