Muang Thong Thani
Muang Thong Thani (Thai: เมืองทองธานี[a] 'golden city') is a large real estate development in Pak Kret, a northern suburb city of Bangkok, in Thailand's Nonthaburi Province. It was mainly developed from the late 1980s by the Bangkok Land Company under the leadership of Anant Kanjanapas, and was envisioned as a satellite city along the lines of the new towns of Hong Kong. It was rapidly built in the early 1990s amid Thailand's booming economy, but ground to a halt with the 1997 Asian financial crisis, a rise and fall that epitomizes Thailand's real estate bubble of the 1990s. Muang Thong Thani's development has since mostly been focused around its Impact exhibition and convention centre, one of the largest in Southeast Asia, built upon facilities created for the 1998 Asian Games.
Muang Thong Thani is connected to Chaeng Watthana, Tiwanon and Prachachuen roads (the last of which runs along the Bangkok–Nonthaburi border), and is served by the Si Rat and Udon Ratthaya expressways. The Pink Line monorail has an under-construction branch line that will directly connect to the Impact venues. Muang Thong Thani is also the site of Sukhothai Thammathirat Open University, and is home to the Muangthong United Football Club.
History
[edit]Development
[edit]Muang Thong Thani was developed from extensive land banks built up by Mongkol Kanjanapas, founder of the Bangkok Land Company, over the 1970s. Back then, the area, on the northern outskirts of Bangkok, not far from Don Mueang International Airport and mainly served by Chaeng Watthana Road, was mostly undeveloped and dominated by paddy fields.[1][2] Mongkol amassed about 4,500 rai (720 ha; 1,800 acres) of land in the area, which he bought at prices of about 40,000 baht per rai (US$10,000/ha, $4,000/acre). Bangkok rapidly grew throughout the 1980s, and by the late 1980s, prices had risen two-hundredfold to 20,000 baht per square wa or 8 million per rai ($50 million/ha, $20 million/acre), allowing the company to profit greatly from land development.[3]
Muang Thong Thani was initially developed from 1978 as a regular housing estate complex, with land subdivided and sold mostly to individual homeowners.[4] In 1989, at the height of Thailand's economic boom, Mongkol's son Anant Kanjanapas returned from Hong Kong to head the company, and announced a new vision: to develop Muang Thong Thani as a privately owned, self-contained satellite city along the lines of the new towns of Hong Kong, which would house up to 700,000 residents.[5][6] The project aimed to capture demand resulting from the emerging Thai middle class and Bangkok's rapid growth, as well as the impending handover of Hong Kong in 1997, which was expected to trigger waves of migration. A flurry of construction began, and the company built dozens of high-rise luxury condominium towers, mid-rise apartment blocks, office and retail buildings, and flatted factories for light industry. The entire development was designed by Australian architectural firm Nation Fender, and the construction undertaken by France-based Bouygues-Thai.[1] Enabled by financial liberalization policies by the Bank of Thailand that opened up capital markets to foreign funds, the project was enthusiastically supported by investors and proceeded at incredible speed—an entire city arising out of the ground within a few years.[1][2][5]
The development also appears to have benefited from government support, including modifications of the land-use plan for Nonthaburi Province and the placement of the terminal ramp of the Si Rat Expressway, which opened in 1993, right next to Muang Thong Thani's entrance, connecting it to the inner city and boosting the project's value.[3][5] The family is known for lobbying through political connections and public gifts—Mongkol had donated land in Muang Thong Thani for the establishment of Sukhothai Thammathirat Open University in 1981, and donations were also made for an office of the government Department of Lands and electrical substations.[7]
Crisis and recovery
[edit]By the mid 1990s, the oversupplied real estate market was beginning to collapse, and construction in Muang Thong Thani came to a halt as buyers—mostly driven by speculation and not actual demand—defaulted on payments, leaving Bangkok Land short of cash and with thousands of units it was unable to sell.[1] The company, valued at $5.2 billion following its public listing in 1992, dropped in value to $36 million after the 1997 Asian financial crisis, with $1 billion of debt—a rise and fall that epitomizes the unrestrained borrowing and speculation that led to the crisis.[2] Mike Douglass and Pornpan Boonchuen in 2006 called it "one of the greatest planning disasters of the 20th century".[8] However, the family was able to enter into debt restructuring plans that allowed them to retain control of the company. The company had also been helped by the sale of a few entire blocks to the Ministry of Defence in 1996 and early 1997, which raised questions of bribery.[5][7]
The 1998 Asian Games in Bangkok proved a turning point for the project, which, before the crisis, had been chosen as one of its venues. Despite the company's financial problems, it completed the Muang Thong Thani Sports Complex for the games, though with barely time to spare.[9][10] Following the games' conclusion, the venue was converted to an exhibition and convention centre complex titled Impact, Muang Thong Thani. With private demand still low following the crisis, Anant worked to promote the centre and lobbied for it to be chosen for government events, including the Board of Investment's BOI Fair in 2000, which began to bring in a steady stream of revenue. The complex was gradually expanded, becoming one of the largest convention centres in Southeast Asia.[7]
While the crisis left the luxury projects mostly empty, as well as the commercial buildings, the low-cost Popular Condominiums near the Impact complex attracted many buyers, and came to house a population of up to 75,000 in 2000, according to Anant. The area developed into a large urban community with an active street life, with shops and restaurants filling the buildings' street-facing ground floors.[1] However, Muang Thong Thani remained primarily residential and never achieved economic self-containment, most of its residents commuting for outside work, especially in Bangkok.[11] As Bangkok Land's finances improved, especially since 2012 when it exited debt restructuring, it has engaged in a new, more measured wave of construction, focusing on shopping malls and retail complexes aimed at capturing local and visitor spending. From 2018 to 2020, the family successfully pushed for the approval of a branch line of the Pink Line monorail into Muang Thong Thani, directly serving the Impact complex. The Pink Line, which runs along Chaeng Watthana Road, had in 2017 been awarded to a joint venture led by BTS Group Holdings, another major holding of the family.[12][13][14]
Features
[edit]Muang Thong Thani covers areas in Ban Mai, Bang Phut and Khlong Kluea subdistricts of the Pak Kret District of Nonthaburi Province, within the city municipality of Pak Kret. The development has two roughly parallel main streets, which link between Chaeng Watthana and Tiwanon roads: Soi Chaeng Watthana–Pak Kret 33 (ซอยแจ้งวัฒนะ-ปากเกร็ด 33), the original main street belonging to the initial development, is also known as Bond Street, a name used to promote the satellite city project, while Soi Chaeng Watthana–Pak Kret 39 serves as the main entrance to the Impact complex from Chaeng Watthana Road. A pair of parallel crossing streets link the two, and serve the Impact complex and Popular Condominiums, beyond which the streets connect to Prachachuen Road, which runs along the Bangkok–Nonthaburi border. The Si Rat Expressway provides access from Chaeng Watthana Road, while the Udon Ratthaya Expressway, which was constructed for the Asian Games and continues northward from Si Rat, has entrance/exit ramps directly inside Muang Thong Thani.[15]
The original housing estate projects are clustered around Bond Street, which is lined by older shophouses near its Chaeng Watthana end. Further down lie Sukhothai Thammathirat Open University (STOU), the Department of Lands office, and the Buddhist temple Wat Phasuk Maneechak.[11] Beehive Lifestyle Mall—a two-storey community shopping centre—opened opposite STOU in 2014.[16] From near its midpoint to Tiwanon, Bond Street is lined by developments of the satellite city project: on one side are the Lake View Condominiums—twenty-four 30-storey residential towers overlooking an artificial lake (some of which remain unfinished)—and on the other are the Villa Offices—ninety 5-storey commercial buildings intended for office/retail/residential mixed-use.[1]
On the other side of the second main road lie the Impact, Muang Thong Thani complex and several retail developments, along with the Popular Condominiums and the flatted factories, which are titled the Industry Condominiums. In the vicinity of Impact are the Thunderdome Stadium (home to the Muangthong United Football Club) and Thunder Dome, both of which are also former Asian Games venues, but are owned by the Sports Authority of Thailand. Also from the Asian Games are tennis courts which were used by the Lawn Tennis Association of Thailand from 1999 to 2004, but are now operated by the Impact Tennis Academy (the Lawn Tennis Association now occupies a newer venue next to Wat Phasuk).[17] More recent developments include the Novotel and Ibis hotels, a small satellite campus of Silpakorn University, and the Cosmo Bazaar mall, which features a cinema and also serves as a public minibus van station. The minibuses, along with the BMTA 166 bus line which terminates nearby and at the Victory Monument in Bangkok, serve as the main modes of public transport to Muang Thong Thani.[18]
Of the eight Industry Condominiums, those that are occupied have been converted to office use, including by the Defence Technology Institute and Kasikornbank.[19] The Popular Condominiums consist of twenty-seven 16-storey apartment blocks, each housing about 1,000 units.[20] Originally marketed to teachers and civil servants, they now mostly house lower-middle income tenants. St. Francis Xavier School is here near the Prachachuen entrance/exit, and there are also a few other small primary schools and kindergartens within the wider development.[21]
Nearer to Tiwanon Road from Impact are the Double Lake Condominiums, higher-end eight-storey apartment buildings launched by Bangkok Land in 2012.[22] The Muang Thong Thani area also contains residential projects by other developers who acquired properties that had been relinquished by Bangkok Land in its debt-restructuring process, including the M Society Condominiums funded by Singapore-based Real Estate Capital Asia Partners, which redeveloped three of the unfinished Lake View towers in 2011,[23] and several housing estates by Pruksa Real Estate.[24][25] An extensive police office complex, initially planned as the Central Investigation Bureau headquarters but now used by the Immigration Bureau, lies next to Thunder Dome near the Impact complex.[26][27]
Explanatory notes
[edit]- ^ RTGS: Mueang Thong Thani, pronounced [mɯ̄aŋ.tʰɔ̄ːŋ.tʰāː.nīː].
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f Marshall, Richard (2003). "The Golden City in the City of Angels". Emerging Urbanity: Global Urban Projects in the Asia Pacific Rim. London: Spon Press. ISBN 9781135159863.
- ^ a b c "Vision is fool's gold in Thailand". Australian Financial Review. Bloomberg. 5 January 2001. Retrieved 9 September 2021.
- ^ a b นพ นรนารถ (September 1990). "เมืองทองธานียกฮ่องกงมาไว้ที่นี่!". Manager (in Thai). Archived from the original on 14 September 2021. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
- ^ Khaowmark, Siwinee (2003). การเปลี่ยนแปลงการอยู่อาศัยของชุมชนใกล้โครงการเมืองทองธานี แจ้งวัฒนะ [Living condition of residential communities near Muang Thong Thani Chaengwattana] (Master's thesis) (in Thai). Bangkok: Chulalongkorn University.
- ^ a b c d Kristof, Nicholas D.; Sanger, David E. (16 February 1999). "How U.S. Wooed Asia To Let Cash Flow In". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 September 2021.
- ^ Barker, Greg (director, writer and producer) (2002). "Global Contagion Begins". Commanding Heights, Episode Three: The New Rules of the Game. InVision Productions, Heights Productions, WGBH Boston. Commanding Heights: Episode 3 (transcript).
- ^ a b c อรวรรณ บัณฑิตกุล (June 2002). ""เมืองทองธานี" รอวันปิดฉาก?". Manager (in Thai). Archived from the original on 14 September 2021. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
- ^ Douglass, Mike; Boonchuen, Pornpan (2006). "Bangkok – Intentional World City". In Amen, M. Mark; Archer, Kevin; Bosman, M. Martin (eds.). Relocating Global Cities: From the Center to the Margins. Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-4122-1.
- ^ Marshall, Samantha (7 December 1998). "What an Imperfect Time To Rethink Games Funding". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 11 September 2021.
- ^ "กว่าจะเป็น 3 สนามหลักของเอเชี่ยนเกมส์ครั้งที่ 13". Manager (in Thai). December 1998. Archived from the original on 14 September 2021. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
- ^ a b Yusuk, Voraphon (2002). การพึ่งพาตนเองของโครงการที่อยู่อาศัยขนาดใหญ่ชานเมืองกรุงเทพมหานคร : กรณีศึกษาเมืองทองธานี [The self-sufficiency of large scale housing projects on the Bangkok fringe : a case study of Muang Thong Thani] (Master's thesis) (in Thai). Bangkok: Chulalongkorn University.
- ^ Katharangsiporn, Kanana (31 October 2012). "BLAND goes all out for Muang Thong Thani". Bangkok Post. Archived from the original on 14 October 2021. Retrieved 28 September 2021.
- ^ Orawan (7 June 2019). "เมืองทองธานี 2562 ทำความรู้จักที่มาของบิ๊กโปรเจ็กท์ก่อนจะกลายเป็นเมืองร้าง แต่วันนี้กำลังจะเป็นเมืองใหม่ (อีกครั้ง) : จาก "เมืองทอง" สู่ "เมืองร้าง" พลิกกลับเป็น "เมืองใหม่"". Marketeer Online (in Thai). Retrieved 9 September 2021.
- ^ Sae-tang, Suporn (8 July 2017). "กุลวดี จินตวร 27 ปี สร้าง "เมืองทองธานี"". Manager 360 (in Thai). Retrieved 11 September 2021.
- ^ "IMPACT Entrance & Exit (How to get to IMPACT Exhibition & Convention Center)" (PDF). impact.co.th. IMPACT Exhibition Management Co., Ltd. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
- ^ "บีไฮฟ ไลฟ์สไตล์มอลล์แห่งแรกบนถนนบอนด์สตรีทใจกลางเมืองทองธานี ครบรอบ 4 ปี". Manager Online (in Thai). 7 November 2018. Retrieved 15 September 2021.
- ^ "ประวัติ สมาคมกีฬา ลอนเทนนิสแห่งประเทศไทย ในพระบรมราชูปถัมภ์" (PDF) (in Thai). The Lawn Tennis Association of Thailand Under His Majesty's Patronage. 2021. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 September 2021. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
- ^ "Direction & Transportation". impact.co.th. IMPACT Exhibition Management Co., Ltd. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
- ^ Pornchokchai, Sopon (7 May 2020). "อนันต์ กาญจนพาสน์ที่ผมรู้จัก". area.co.th (in Thai). Agency for Real Estate Affairs. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
- ^ อรวรรณ บัณฑิตกุล (November 1994). "เอ็มเอสเอ็ม. ผู้ว่าเมืองทองธานี". Manager (in Thai). Archived from the original on 14 September 2021. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
- ^ Nakvilairote, Nattakitta; Khongouan, Waralak (21 April 2021). "การสำรวจสิ่งแวดล้อมเมืองตามแนวความคิดเมืองน่าอยู่ องค์การอนามัยโลก : กรณีศึกษา โครงการป๊อปปูล่า คอนโดมิเนียม เมืองทองธานี จังหวัดนนทบุรี" [The Survey of Urban Environment According to WHO’s Livable City Concept: Case Study of Muang Thong Thani’s Popular Condominium, Nonthaburi Province]. Sarasatr (in Thai). 4 (1): 1–13. ISSN 2630-0141.
- ^ "บีแลนด์พร้อมลุยหนักธุรกิจอสังหา". Post Today (in Thai). 1 November 2013. Retrieved 15 September 2021.
- ^ "Recap keen on Japan market". Bangkok Post. 26 April 2011.
- ^ "ทุนสิงคโปร์ไล่ช็อปซากตึก". Post Today (in Thai). 5 April 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2021.
- ^ ชูชาติ ม่วงไข่ (24 July 2018). ""แจ้งวัฒนะ" CBD เมืองนนท์ ทางด่วน-รถไฟฟ้า-สนามบิน คอนโดฯ ใหม่ราคาไม่ถึง 2 ล้าน". Home.co.th (in Thai). Retrieved 15 September 2021.
- ^ "เมืองทองฯแจงไม่เกี่ยวม็อบแดง". Post Today. 16 November 2013. Retrieved 15 September 2021.
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