Jump to content

Army justifies building of new King Naresuan shrine in Phitsanulok


Recommended Posts

Posted

Army justifies building of new King Naresuan shrine in Phitsanulok

By MONGKOLCHAOWARAT TANGMANGMEE 
THE NATION 

 

012717fc95dadef7cf857d16a15fe9ce.jpeg

A bird’s-eye view of the King Naresuan the Great Shrine in Phitsanulok’s Muang district and the under-construction larger shrine building that has drawn criticism for blocking the view from the main road of the old shrine.

 

THE ARMY has justified the construction of a building that has drawn flak from locals for blocking the view of the old King Naresuan the Great Shrine in Phitsanulok province.
 

The shrine is revered and enjoys deep sentimental value for the locals.

 

The Third Army Region, which co-sponsored the construction, has said that the new building was aimed at accommodating the increasing number of people visiting the site. 

 

The old shrine is located in the compound of Chan Palace, which was the birthplace and residence of King Naresuan. The shrine was officially opened in 1962 by Their Majesties King Rama IX and Queen Sirikit.

 

Once construction of the new building is finished, the King Naresuan statue would be moved from the old shrine to the new building, Third Army Region deputy commander Maj-General Supachok Thawatteerachai told the press yesterday.

 

The old shrine would not be demolished but it would be conserved while certain features and its landscape would be adjusted to be in harmony with the new building, he said. 

 

The Phitsanulok Phittayakom School and school buildings that used to cover the Chan Palace ruins have been demolished to facilitate archaeological excavations. However, the old shrine was spared as people continued to pay their respects there and it served as the venue for many key rituals. 

 

The Third Army Region and related agencies stepped in around 2010 to carry out conservation and development of Chan Palace. The project’s 13 action plans included the construction of a new shrine equipped with tools for visitors of all ages, sexes and physical disabilities, Supachok said. He said the project organising committee had held a public hearing in Phitsanulok about the project on April 2, 2015 to gather the opinions of locals aged 15-51 on whether they agreed with the development of the site as a tourist attraction and a historic site, and on the construction of a new shrine. 

 

The committee claimed to have received the people’s nod after which it went ahead with securing the permission of the Fine Arts Department. The department agreed with the proposal on the condition that it be built within the existing concrete-paved plaza. After many adjustments, the construction plan was approved by the department on May 6, 2017. 

 

The site will be taken care of by the Phitsanulok provincial authorities, as per the Phrarajawang Chan Somdet Phra Naresuan Maharat Foundation’s resolution on April 24. 

 

The Phitsanulok governor is a member of the foundation’s executive board. The new building, towards which the Army contributed Bt40 million, has already been erected. It is now awaiting interior and decoration work. A budget of Bt55 million will come from the province cluster’s budget and will be supervised by the Fine Arts Office 6 in Sukhothai province, according to Supachok. 

 

A contractor has been identified to carry out the decor work while the designs are in process of getting approval, Supachok said.

However, locals opposed to the construction of the new building construction have been gaining increasing support. 

 

On May 27, the opposition group’s representatives – retired Army Colonel Chao Ketdee and civilian Montree Sripirom – led 100 others, most of them the local school’s alumnus, to petition the Third Army Region and related agencies to stop the construction and restore the old shrine’s surrounding area back to its previous state. 

 

Full story: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/national/30348325

 

thenation_logo.jpg

-- © Copyright The Nation 2018-06-22
Posted
2 hours ago, webfact said:

The new building, towards which the Army contributed Bt40 million, has already been erected.

They had a whip round? Are we to believe this was personal donations by army personnel? If not then it was govt money redirected. 

Posted

Using 40 million from their inordinate large Defence Budget is not what should be happening , but then as they say Thai Is Thailand , and anything goes . 

 

Posted

I know this is a stupid question - but why?

Why on earth does the army spend 40 million of taxpayers money building this monstrosity of a barn? What is it for? How they got to 40 mil for the bloody thing is beyond me too. I have seen it, it looks as though Bob the Builder got the contract.

 

Time for a cup of tea, a Bex and a good lie down.

Posted
3 hours ago, fantom said:

I know this is a stupid question - but why?

Why on earth does the army spend 40 million of taxpayers money building this monstrosity of a barn? What is it for? How they got to 40 mil for the bloody thing is beyond me too. I have seen it, it looks as though Bob the Builder got the contract.

 

Time for a cup of tea, a Bex and a good lie down.

As the army's job is protecting the country against foreign invaders, I suppose this is part of some sort of defence structure.

Are the walls over a meter thick? As there hole in the side where barrels of cannons can shoot from? Is it a strategic location?

Guess so...

  • Thanks 1

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



×
×
  • Create New...