Dear Subscribers and viewers, Here I like to share with you, every little experience I had and I will have, during my holidays and travels, that including the flights and the hotels, the foods and the all the fun that one can experiences . While in my blog you can find vital information includes suggestions, travel packages, personal guide & more, that can help you for planning your trips. . Any suggested Ideas are welcomed. Thank you all.
Thursday, February 27, 2014
Is it safe to travel to Bangkok alone ?
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
How much cost a drink in Thailand ??
Tuesday, February 25, 2014
What's makes Thailand one of the best touristic destinations .
Monday, February 24, 2014
Amata resort - Phuket
Sunday, February 23, 2014
Bangkok night life , Nana plaza - soi 11
Friday, February 21, 2014
Lebua hotel - sky bar Bangkok
State Tower is a skyscraper located on Silom Road,Bang Rak business district, Bangkok, Thailand, adjacent to Charoen Krung Road. Built in 2001, it is the largest building in Southeast Asia, with 300,000 m2 (3,200,000 sq ft) floor area. State Tower has 68 floors and is 247 m (810 ft) tall, making it the third tallest building in Thailand as in 2011 and 139th in the world. It is also the tallest mixed-use building in Thailand.
Conceived by Thai architect Professor Rangsan Torsuwan in the early 1990s and designed by Rangsan Architecture, the massive building is characterised by its thirty-meter tall golden rooftop dome and neo-classical balconies. It was originally named "Silom Precious Tower", later "Royal Charoen Krung Tower" (RCK Tower) and then "State Tower".
State Tower contains condominiums, serviced apartments, offices and retail units. It is also home to a five-star hotel called lebua (sic). There is a forty-story high atrium inside, and on the 64th floor is Sirocco,[2] the world's highest ope
Thursday, February 20, 2014
Sukhumvit Bangkok
Sunday, February 9, 2014
China town - Bangkok 2013
Bangkok's Chinatown has been a center of trade since Chinese merchants settled here at the end of the 18th century, moving east from the village of Bang Kok to make way for what would become the new royal capital on Ko Rattanakosin. It remains a commercial center, though these days it's literally teeming, and a photographer's delight.
An easy starting point is Bangkok's 92-year-old (1) Hua Lamphong Railway Station, which is also the end of the subway line. From the subway, take Exit 1 onto Th Rama IV, cross the bridge, and take Th Traimit (Trimitr) left at 45 degrees. On the right you'll soon see (2) Wat Traimit, famous for its 700-year-old Golden Buddha image, a 5.5-ton, 10-foot-high (3-meter-high) work of solid gold that had been concealed under a plaster covering for hundreds of years until it was rediscovered in 1955.