Popular Post chuang Posted September 19, 2021 Popular Post Share Posted September 19, 2021 LINE_MOVIE_1632038169420.mp4 13 8 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thaibeachlovers Posted September 22, 2021 Share Posted September 22, 2021 Any idea what year that is? My first visit was in 1974. The traffic around the moat was as bonkers bad as pre corona, and there was no lift up to Doi Suthep temple. Lot of stairs to climb. One of the royals must have been staying in the palace because there were soldiers stationed on every corner of the road up the hill. The second hand shops on the north side of the moat were full of American army gear ( ? from Vietnam ). Only had one day/ night there so don't remember much else. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bamboozled Posted September 23, 2021 Share Posted September 23, 2021 Does anyone know when the movie theater was shut down across the intersection from Pantip Plaza? Has anyone ventured in there and poked around? Must be fascinating. It saddens me to think it has just been left there to rot when in my mind it could have been a great attraction given the location. But I suppose all those old theaters were abandoned because they weren't a draw anymore. Amazing it just sits there year after year... 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chuang Posted September 23, 2021 Author Share Posted September 23, 2021 Checked with some locals they reckon about 60 years ago....Price of gold then was 600 baht per baht, today about 28000 baht if not mistaken.. Been to the demolished cinema it was large then it was converted to Khan Tok dinner and show...My first trip to Chiangmai was in 1969 it was more modern than the video.. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post LawrenceN Posted September 23, 2021 Popular Post Share Posted September 23, 2021 During the shot of the Naowarat Bridge with the big steel frame, the narrator says it's 2510 (=1967), though the title says B. E. 2010. That's a typo, I figure. Certainly this is a mix of photos from a number of different years. I first set foot in CM in 1978. There were some red pickups, but no tuk-tuk. Lots of samlor, as shown. I love the dialect. I have always been enamored of Kham Meuang. 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TigerandDog Posted September 23, 2021 Share Posted September 23, 2021 judging by the cars and the motor bikes being ridden I would guess late 50's early 60's. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Aussiepeter Posted September 23, 2021 Popular Post Share Posted September 23, 2021 7 hours ago, bamboozled said: Does anyone know when the movie theater was shut down across the intersection from Pantip Plaza? Has anyone ventured in there and poked around? Must be fascinating. It saddens me to think it has just been left there to rot when in my mind it could have been a great attraction given the location. But I suppose all those old theaters were abandoned because they weren't a draw anymore. Amazing it just sits there year after year... I lived in C Mai for twenty-five years or so, but finally left in 2013. At one stage I visited many of the abandoned buildings and wrote a story about them for a local magazine, only to have them lose my draft. The movie theatre was still operating in 1989 as I went there once or twice - very nice & very cheap (no double pricing). I recall a sad occasion when a farang was found dead there after the end of a film. Apparently a cobra had slithered in at some time during the film and had bitten him several times - it was rainy season. If you go down Changklan Rd past the old theatre about 500m, just before the next traffic lights there is an abandoned 14 storey building in a Soi on the right - it's been there unfinished since at least 1990. It had been approved as eight floors from memory, but the builder illegally added extra floors. A similar hotel building that had been "modified" collapsed in the early 90's (in Udon Thani from memory), killing a US Medal of Honour winner from the Vietnam conflict, his Thai wife & others eating dinner. After that they clamped down on illegally modified high-rise buildings. They demolished the old railway hotel opposite C Mai railway station, but not before I climbed up to the top and got some amazing (pre-digital) photos. The best secret is Asia's first ever revolving restaurant, which sits on top of the long abandoned Bpoy Luang Hotel. It is on the main highway intersection with the road coming from the railway station. I left in 2013, but it was still there a few years ago when I visited. (I did write about it a while back on 'tv'). Assuming it is still there, it looks like a smaller round room on top of an old white rectangular building. I rode a Honda Dream up the ramp/fire-esape to the top about 20 years ago & climbed into the old revolving restaurant. It was a big G.I. hotel in the Vietnam War & had a disco-like mirror-ball in the revolving restaurant & it had a big swimming pool in the rear. All the lifts etc have been removed and it is just a shell now, but it was incredible back in 1968 or so. They started to refurb it in the 90's as a hospital, but the 97 crash killed it. They fixed up a couple of rooms and filmed episodes of a popular Thai 'soap' opera there in the early 90's too. I actually appeared in that show quite by accident, when I stopped & asked a BIB for directions (I speak local Thai). The 'cop' laughed and told me in perfect English that he was not a real cop but was an actor and, "would I mind riding my motorbike up the street again and asking him the same question, so they could film it" ! I was famous in local bars for a week to two. The 90's were a fantastic time to be in Chiang Mai (or elsewhere in Thailand for that matter) and, the air was clean ! 10 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
khunjeff Posted September 23, 2021 Share Posted September 23, 2021 (edited) 17 minutes ago, Aussiepeter said: A similar hotel building that had been "modified" collapsed in the early 90's (in Udon Thani from memory), killing a US Medal of Honour winner from the Vietnam conflict, his Thai wife & others eating dinner. After that they clamped down on illegally modified high-rise buildings. Are you thinking of the Royal Plaza collapse in Korat? It was illegally modified, but from three stories to six, so not a high rise per se. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collapse_of_the_Royal_Plaza_Hotel Edited September 23, 2021 by khunjeff Added link 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chesterubi1 Posted September 23, 2021 Share Posted September 23, 2021 1 hour ago, Aussiepeter said: The best secret is Asia's first ever revolving restaurant, which sits on top of the long abandoned Bpoy Luang Hotel. This was actually demolished last year and apparently they are going to build a new hospital there. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post seedy Posted September 23, 2021 Popular Post Share Posted September 23, 2021 https://www.travel-and-history.com/poy-luang-hotel/ 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bamboozled Posted September 23, 2021 Share Posted September 23, 2021 (edited) 3 hours ago, Aussiepeter said: I lived in C Mai for twenty-five years or so, but finally left in 2013. At one stage I visited many of the abandoned buildings and wrote a story about them for a local magazine, only to have them lose my draft. The movie theatre was still operating in 1989 as I went there once or twice - very nice & very cheap (no double pricing). I recall a sad occasion when a farang was found dead there after the end of a film. Apparently a cobra had slithered in at some time during the film and had bitten him several times - it was rainy season. If you go down Changklan Rd past the old theatre about 500m, just before the next traffic lights there is an abandoned 14 storey building in a Soi on the right - it's been there unfinished since at least 1990. It had been approved as eight floors from memory, but the builder illegally added extra floors. A similar hotel building that had been "modified" collapsed in the early 90's (in Udon Thani from memory), killing a US Medal of Honour winner from the Vietnam conflict, his Thai wife & others eating dinner. After that they clamped down on illegally modified high-rise buildings. They demolished the old railway hotel opposite C Mai railway station, but not before I climbed up to the top and got some amazing (pre-digital) photos. The best secret is Asia's first ever revolving restaurant, which sits on top of the long abandoned Bpoy Luang Hotel. It is on the main highway intersection with the road coming from the railway station. I left in 2013, but it was still there a few years ago when I visited. (I did write about it a while back on 'tv'). Assuming it is still there, it looks like a smaller round room on top of an old white rectangular building. I rode a Honda Dream up the ramp/fire-esape to the top about 20 years ago & climbed into the old revolving restaurant. It was a big G.I. hotel in the Vietnam War & had a disco-like mirror-ball in the revolving restaurant & it had a big swimming pool in the rear. All the lifts etc have been removed and it is just a shell now, but it was incredible back in 1968 or so. They started to refurb it in the 90's as a hospital, but the 97 crash killed it. They fixed up a couple of rooms and filmed episodes of a popular Thai 'soap' opera there in the early 90's too. I actually appeared in that show quite by accident, when I stopped & asked a BIB for directions (I speak local Thai). The 'cop' laughed and told me in perfect English that he was not a real cop but was an actor and, "would I mind riding my motorbike up the street again and asking him the same question, so they could film it" ! I was famous in local bars for a week to two. The 90's were a fantastic time to be in Chiang Mai (or elsewhere in Thailand for that matter) and, the air was clean ! I think that abandoned building 500m down Changklan and right onto a soi has been....wait for it.....refurbished! I could be wrong and I might have your soi wrong but I do remember a big graffiti covered shell that it seemed they used for rappelling or something. Anyway, driving by there a few weeks ago I was looking for that building and what I saw was a fixed up one. I could have been out of my tree, though. I will have to check again. I did eyeball that round rest. many a time and wonder. I didn't realize it had been demolished. The cobra story seems hard to believe. I mean, wouldn't he have cried out? But what do I know?? Thank you for the info! Edited September 23, 2021 by bamboozled 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Acharn Posted September 23, 2021 Share Posted September 23, 2021 In the frame on Nawarat Bridge, the caption says พ.ศ. 2010, but in the sound track she says 2510, which makes more sense. พ.ศ. 2010 would be 1467 AD. พ.ศ. 2510 would be 1967 AD. I'm surprised they were still using so many pedicabs. I first came to Bangkok in 1972, and they had been outlawed there by then. I didn't bother looking through the rest of the video to see if any other dates were given. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post bangkok19 Posted September 23, 2021 Popular Post Share Posted September 23, 2021 The IRON BRIDGE over the Ping River actually looks a lot older than it really is. Does anybody know when it was built? I only stumbled on it by accident in the 90's even though I used to stay at the (old) DIAMOND HOTEL at the beginning of the 80's. Before that I used to stay at the ANODARD HOTEL. It's nice to see that the 'twins' (bellboys) are STILL there. My old friend (Sajee) used to play the piano accordian in the Coffee Shop there. She also had THE POPPY BAR in FANG and... was the first lady to open a bar in SOI COWBOY. She became one of the early powerbrokers in Soi 23 and Cowboy along with Cowboy (himself), Bien and Ted. In 1983 (for whatever reason) I stayed 3 nights at the CHIANG INN behind the NIGHT BAZAAR bldg. A very good little bar area close by... BLUE SKY BAR and HEART were my favourites. In the late 80's I enjoyed Stewart and Nok's company at the OASIS BAR... great music at night with that Tomboy lady that played the 12-string guitar. We used to "kick-on" to the PEACOCK COFFEE SHOP (under the MONTRI HOTEL)for an early morning drink. It was Chiang Mai's version of Bangkok's THERMAE. I remember watching the sun rise outside the front on the day the PEACOCK closed down.. it would've been 1988 or '89. Back to the ANODARD... the Kangsadan Coffee Shop next to the pool was popular with the local Thai's in the 80's... you could sit by the pool in the afternoons and listen to the Thai band rehearse. Just around the cnr from the Anodard (and up from the biscuit wholesalers on the cnr) was the DAWRUNG COFFEE SHOP. It opened in the afternoon and was great for 'borrowing' the ladies to take back to the Anodard. Another of my very favourite bars back then was THE KAREN HUT in Chiang Moi Lane #1. It was up that lane just before the back of what is now the AMORA. Of course in the old days.. when you left the Night Bazaar area and walked up LOI KROA to the 'moat' there were no bars... the onlt sounds you could hear after the SURIWONG HOTEL were the samlor cyclists ringing their bell, or the wind chimes in the Wat halfway along. I can remember the Kampangdin brothels... 30 baht for a short time however farang weren't really welcome. I saw the biggest plastic bag of condoms I'd ever seen in one of those brothels. Of course this was when the AIDS virus hit the world! The Mae Ping Hotel didn't like its Japanese guests having to walk past these brothels so, bought up all their land. These days I walk a lot around Chiang Mai and enjoy still seeing small remnants from the past. 6 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fangless Posted September 24, 2021 Share Posted September 24, 2021 It appears to have opened about 1967; ‘Iron Bridge’ reflection of Nawarat Bridge – Chiang Mai World Heritage Initiative (chiangmaiheritage.org) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thaibeachlovers Posted September 24, 2021 Share Posted September 24, 2021 15 hours ago, Aussiepeter said: I lived in C Mai for twenty-five years or so, but finally left in 2013. At one stage I visited many of the abandoned buildings and wrote a story about them for a local magazine, only to have them lose my draft. The movie theatre was still operating in 1989 as I went there once or twice - very nice & very cheap (no double pricing). I recall a sad occasion when a farang was found dead there after the end of a film. Apparently a cobra had slithered in at some time during the film and had bitten him several times - it was rainy season. If you go down Changklan Rd past the old theatre about 500m, just before the next traffic lights there is an abandoned 14 storey building in a Soi on the right - it's been there unfinished since at least 1990. It had been approved as eight floors from memory, but the builder illegally added extra floors. A similar hotel building that had been "modified" collapsed in the early 90's (in Udon Thani from memory), killing a US Medal of Honour winner from the Vietnam conflict, his Thai wife & others eating dinner. After that they clamped down on illegally modified high-rise buildings. They demolished the old railway hotel opposite C Mai railway station, but not before I climbed up to the top and got some amazing (pre-digital) photos. The best secret is Asia's first ever revolving restaurant, which sits on top of the long abandoned Bpoy Luang Hotel. It is on the main highway intersection with the road coming from the railway station. I left in 2013, but it was still there a few years ago when I visited. (I did write about it a while back on 'tv'). Assuming it is still there, it looks like a smaller round room on top of an old white rectangular building. I rode a Honda Dream up the ramp/fire-esape to the top about 20 years ago & climbed into the old revolving restaurant. It was a big G.I. hotel in the Vietnam War & had a disco-like mirror-ball in the revolving restaurant & it had a big swimming pool in the rear. All the lifts etc have been removed and it is just a shell now, but it was incredible back in 1968 or so. They started to refurb it in the 90's as a hospital, but the 97 crash killed it. They fixed up a couple of rooms and filmed episodes of a popular Thai 'soap' opera there in the early 90's too. I actually appeared in that show quite by accident, when I stopped & asked a BIB for directions (I speak local Thai). The 'cop' laughed and told me in perfect English that he was not a real cop but was an actor and, "would I mind riding my motorbike up the street again and asking him the same question, so they could film it" ! I was famous in local bars for a week to two. The 90's were a fantastic time to be in Chiang Mai (or elsewhere in Thailand for that matter) and, the air was clean ! Good post. I suppose you have been in the "haunted" building inside the moat on the north west corner. Apparently it's quite well known. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thaibeachlovers Posted September 24, 2021 Share Posted September 24, 2021 4 hours ago, bangkok19 said: These days I walk a lot around Chiang Mai and enjoy still seeing small remnants from the past. Likewise ( at least when I lived in C M ). I discovered the real gems of C M hidden away and thankfully ignored by the tourists. I suppose they are the only things I miss about C M. the "new" city could be anywhere and isn't IMO in any way "special". 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thaitom Posted September 24, 2021 Share Posted September 24, 2021 On 9/23/2021 at 6:43 AM, thaibeachlovers said: Any idea what year that is? My first visit was in 1974. The traffic around the moat was as bonkers bad as pre corona, and there was no lift up to Doi Suthep temple. Lot of stairs to climb. One of the royals must have been staying in the palace because there were soldiers stationed on every corner of the road up the hill. The second hand shops on the north side of the moat were full of American army gear ( ? from Vietnam ). Only had one day/ night there so don't remember much else. It was a dirt road then, slow going during the rainy season. there was no train station, it looked like a bus stop. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chuang Posted September 24, 2021 Author Share Posted September 24, 2021 I still love the old Chiangmai... 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Aussiepeter Posted September 24, 2021 Share Posted September 24, 2021 On 9/23/2021 at 8:01 PM, khunjeff said: Are you thinking of the Royal Plaza collapse in Korat? It was illegally modified, but from three stories to six, so not a high rise per se. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collapse_of_the_Royal_Plaza_Hotel That was the one. I remember the cause was they put up a lot of water tanks on the roof and piped water up to them. The building couldn't handle the weight of the additional floors plus all the extra weight of the full water tanks and the whole place suddenly collapsed. So sad for a Medal-of- Honour winner to go that way. Over the many years I lived in Chiang Mai, I met a number of military veterans who had also survived major battles, only to die from 'misadventure' in Thailand. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Aussiepeter Posted September 24, 2021 Share Posted September 24, 2021 14 hours ago, thaibeachlovers said: Good post. I suppose you have been in the "haunted" building inside the moat on the north west corner. Apparently it's quite well known. Yes, I had a look through it but it was un-exciting, to say the least ! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Aussiepeter Posted September 24, 2021 Share Posted September 24, 2021 On 9/23/2021 at 10:56 PM, bamboozled said: I think that abandoned building 500m down Changklan and right onto a soi has been....wait for it.....refurbished! I could be wrong and I might have your soi wrong but I do remember a big graffiti covered shell that it seemed they used for rappelling or something. Anyway, driving by there a few weeks ago I was looking for that building and what I saw was a fixed up one. I could have been out of my tree, though. I will have to check again. I did eyeball that round rest. many a time and wonder. I didn't realize it had been demolished. The cobra story seems hard to believe. I mean, wouldn't he have cried out? But what do I know?? Thank you for the info! The chap who died from snakebite had consumed quite a lot of alcohol before going to see the movie and may even have fallen asleep. He was wearing shorts and flip-flops (thongs for us Aussies) and the cobra had bitten him on his foot. According to my wife, when the lights came on at the end of the film, the locals just thought he was asleep. She told me she wouldn't ever go in there - Thais tend to avoid areas that may be "ghost-prone". 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bangkok19 Posted September 24, 2021 Share Posted September 24, 2021 20 hours ago, fangless said: It appears to have opened about 1967; ‘Iron Bridge’ reflection of Nawarat Bridge – Chiang Mai World Heritage Initiative (chiangmaiheritage.org) Very interesting piece. Thanks for posting. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
meechai Posted September 25, 2021 Share Posted September 25, 2021 Thank You for post/video very nice ! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bamboozled Posted September 25, 2021 Share Posted September 25, 2021 11 hours ago, Aussiepeter said: The chap who died from snakebite had consumed quite a lot of alcohol before going to see the movie and may even have fallen asleep. He was wearing shorts and flip-flops (thongs for us Aussies) and the cobra had bitten him on his foot. According to my wife, when the lights came on at the end of the film, the locals just thought he was asleep. She told me she wouldn't ever go in there - Thais tend to avoid areas that may be "ghost-prone". Furthermore....what was playing?? I want to avoid watching that movie! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DrPhibes Posted September 25, 2021 Share Posted September 25, 2021 On 9/23/2021 at 4:44 PM, Aussiepeter said: I lived in C Mai for twenty-five years or so, but finally left in 2013. At one stage I visited many of the abandoned buildings and wrote a story about them for a local magazine, only to have them lose my draft. The movie theatre was still operating in 1989 as I went there once or twice - very nice & very cheap (no double pricing). I recall a sad occasion when a farang was found dead there after the end of a film. Apparently a cobra had slithered in at some time during the film and had bitten him several times - it was rainy season. If you go down Changklan Rd past the old theatre about 500m, just before the next traffic lights there is an abandoned 14 storey building in a Soi on the right - it's been there unfinished since at least 1990. It had been approved as eight floors from memory, but the builder illegally added extra floors. A similar hotel building that had been "modified" collapsed in the early 90's (in Udon Thani from memory), killing a US Medal of Honour winner from the Vietnam conflict, his Thai wife & others eating dinner. After that they clamped down on illegally modified high-rise buildings. They demolished the old railway hotel opposite C Mai railway station, but not before I climbed up to the top and got some amazing (pre-digital) photos. The best secret is Asia's first ever revolving restaurant, which sits on top of the long abandoned Bpoy Luang Hotel. It is on the main highway intersection with the road coming from the railway station. I left in 2013, but it was still there a few years ago when I visited. (I did write about it a while back on 'tv'). Assuming it is still there, it looks like a smaller round room on top of an old white rectangular building. I rode a Honda Dream up the ramp/fire-esape to the top about 20 years ago & climbed into the old revolving restaurant. It was a big G.I. hotel in the Vietnam War & had a disco-like mirror-ball in the revolving restaurant & it had a big swimming pool in the rear. All the lifts etc have been removed and it is just a shell now, but it was incredible back in 1968 or so. They started to refurb it in the 90's as a hospital, but the 97 crash killed it. They fixed up a couple of rooms and filmed episodes of a popular Thai 'soap' opera there in the early 90's too. I actually appeared in that show quite by accident, when I stopped & asked a BIB for directions (I speak local Thai). The 'cop' laughed and told me in perfect English that he was not a real cop but was an actor and, "would I mind riding my motorbike up the street again and asking him the same question, so they could film it" ! I was famous in local bars for a week to two. The 90's were a fantastic time to be in Chiang Mai (or elsewhere in Thailand for that matter) and, the air was clean ! '92- Black Cat Bar off the Moat road (I think near a bar named Johns?), had some crazy times there! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bangkok19 Posted September 25, 2021 Share Posted September 25, 2021 17 hours ago, DrPhibes said: '92- Black Cat Bar off the Moat road (I think near a bar named Johns?), had some crazy times there! Close... yes the BLACK CAT BAR was behind the OASIS, you walked down the lane alongside the OASIS. Further down that Soi (walking towards the Anodard) on the RHS was the PATTANA MEAT FACTORY. (It's now a Guest House). Its high walls and gate always had a Thai Army guy nearby... Stewart from the OASIS told me it was KUHN SAH'S Chiang Mai H.Q. At the time he was the #1 Opium producer/trafficker in S.E.Asia. (I'm talking 1988/89). There were always a couple of spooks from the CNX U.S. Consulate in the Oasis drinking with Stewart keeping their eyes on the comings and goings at the "Pattana Meat Factory". After Stewart's passing, conspiracy theorists often said that Stewart was a lot more than his Aeronautical Engineer profession, but rather, another 'spook' or 'ex-spook' and named his bar after the O.A.S. Every time I walk past that small guest house and see the farang women on the deck chairs I think to myself.... little do you know! When the OASIS finally closed (around '90) many of 'the girls' moved on to other bars, I saw several of them at the newly opened TOP NORTH CENTER. Another intimate little outdoor (yet indoor) bar was the BIG BEER BAR in Kotchasarn Rd. It was right near the AROON RAI Restaurant. The SPOTLIGHT was just down the road and it was a small little place (trying to be a 'go-go bar).. later on it bought the shophouse next door and expanded.. the only go-go bar on the "strip". Further into the early 90's and the BA BA BO BO opened on one corner of LOI KROH, and there already was an IRISH BAR the other corner. Next to the BA BA BO BO was the LINDA BAR. During the late 90's, German expat ROLFE was the owner of the BA BA BO BO. He'd sit behind the bar near the corner playing CD's (and even requests)... the sound system was pretty good. In the 2000's, AM took over from Rolfe. Memories! 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chuang Posted September 26, 2021 Author Share Posted September 26, 2021 Used to patronise Aroon Rai and occasionlly Spotlight bar...in the early 70's are they still around, they are close to each other...Those were the days.. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bangkok19 Posted September 26, 2021 Share Posted September 26, 2021 16 hours ago, chuang said: Used to patronise Aroon Rai and occasionlly Spotlight bar...in the early 70's are they still around, they are close to each other...Those were the days.. Aroon Rai is one of the oldest restaurants in the area. There used to be the KAI-TONG Restaurant further down Kotchasaan Rd (past Loi Kroa) their specialty was SNAKE STEAK. Also Crocodile, Iguana etc. There was a deep pit in the centre of the front section that was full of "reptiles" you could choose to be cooked and eat. It was lit up by bright light... I always remember the hundreds of small insects flying around at the top of the pit in that shaft of light. It was opened until about 3 or 4 in the morning... the attraction for me was.. buy a Snake Steak and get 1 large Singha for free! At 4 in the morning - it tasted like chicken! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
freedomnow Posted September 26, 2021 Share Posted September 26, 2021 On 9/23/2021 at 10:44 AM, Aussiepeter said: I lived in C Mai for twenty-five years or so, but finally left in 2013. At one stage I visited many of the abandoned buildings and wrote a story about them for a local magazine, only to have them lose my draft. The movie theatre was still operating in 1989 as I went there once or twice - very nice & very cheap (no double pricing). I recall a sad occasion when a farang was found dead there after the end of a film. Apparently a cobra had slithered in at some time during the film and had bitten him several times - it was rainy season. If you go down Changklan Rd past the old theatre about 500m, just before the next traffic lights there is an abandoned 14 storey building in a Soi on the right - it's been there unfinished since at least 1990. It had been approved as eight floors from memory, but the builder illegally added extra floors. A similar hotel building that had been "modified" collapsed in the early 90's (in Udon Thani from memory), killing a US Medal of Honour winner from the Vietnam conflict, his Thai wife & others eating dinner. After that they clamped down on illegally modified high-rise buildings. They demolished the old railway hotel opposite C Mai railway station, but not before I climbed up to the top and got some amazing (pre-digital) photos. The best secret is Asia's first ever revolving restaurant, which sits on top of the long abandoned Bpoy Luang Hotel. It is on the main highway intersection with the road coming from the railway station. I left in 2013, but it was still there a few years ago when I visited. (I did write about it a while back on 'tv'). Assuming it is still there, it looks like a smaller round room on top of an old white rectangular building. I rode a Honda Dream up the ramp/fire-esape to the top about 20 years ago & climbed into the old revolving restaurant. It was a big G.I. hotel in the Vietnam War & had a disco-like mirror-ball in the revolving restaurant & it had a big swimming pool in the rear. All the lifts etc have been removed and it is just a shell now, but it was incredible back in 1968 or so. They started to refurb it in the 90's as a hospital, but the 97 crash killed it. They fixed up a couple of rooms and filmed episodes of a popular Thai 'soap' opera there in the early 90's too. I actually appeared in that show quite by accident, when I stopped & asked a BIB for directions (I speak local Thai). The 'cop' laughed and told me in perfect English that he was not a real cop but was an actor and, "would I mind riding my motorbike up the street again and asking him the same question, so they could film it" ! I was famous in local bars for a week to two. The 90's were a fantastic time to be in Chiang Mai (or elsewhere in Thailand for that matter) and, the air was clean ! Thought your story of old was great - do you think it was fantastic because you were younger or it was generally just better all-round (why) or bit of both ? Also, was it easier to stay here long-term then ? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Damrongsak Posted September 26, 2021 Popular Post Share Posted September 26, 2021 On 9/23/2021 at 3:04 AM, LawrenceN said: During the shot of the Naowarat Bridge with the big steel frame, the narrator says it's 2510 (=1967), though the title says B. E. 2010. That's a typo, I figure. Certainly this is a mix of photos from a number of different years. I first set foot in CM in 1978. There were some red pickups, but no tuk-tuk. Lots of samlor, as shown. I love the dialect. I have always been enamored of Kham Meuang. One of the pics had a Jeep truck or Gladiator station wagon in it (not a military jeep). I sold one like that when I came to Thailand in 1977. Looked about like a 1971 or thereabouts. Certainly a mix of photos. At ~ 1:14 @LawrenceN We only went to Chiang Mai once, on our honeymoon in Oct 1978. 43rd anniversary coming up. We thought we'd die on the bus trip over the mountains from Loei. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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