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Witthayu_Road Latitude and Longitude:

13°44′0″N 100°32′45″E / 13.73333°N 100.54583°E / 13.73333; 100.54583
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Witthayu Road from above
Witthayu Road, looking north from Sarasin Junction at the corner of Lumphini Park

Witthayu Road ( Thai: ถนนวิทยุ, RTGSThanon Witthayu, pronounced [tʰā.nǒn wít.tʰā.júʔ]), commonly known in English as Wireless Road, is a road in Bangkok, located almost entirely in Lumphini Subdistrict of Pathum Wan District.

Witthayu Road originally linked Phloen Chit Road to Rama IV Road, running from what is now Phloen Chit Intersection to Witthayu Intersection, where it continues on as Sathon Road. It was extended from the Phloen Chit end to cross the Saen Saep Canal and meet Phetchaburi Road in 1972,[ citation needed] reaching a total distance of 2.6 kilometres (1.6 mi).

Tree-lined and in parts divided into three carriageways, Witthayu Road is one of the greener streets passing through the city centre, as it runs along the length of Lumphini Park, the leafy campuses of the American, Dutch and British Embassies, as well as Nai Lert Park, originally the home of the eponymous Chinese businessman who developed the area in the 1920s. Several other countries also have embassies on the road or within the office towers of All Seasons Place.

The road received its name (which literally means "radio") from the fact that it passed by Saladaeng Station, one of Thailand's earliest radio transmitter stations. [1] The area of the station, on the corner of Witthayu and Rama IV Roads, later became the site of the Armed Forces Academies Preparatory School (1961–2000), then the Suan Lum Night Bazaar (2001–2010). The area, which is served by Lumphini Station of the MRT's Blue Line, is now set to be developed as TCC Group's mixed-use megaproject One Bangkok. [2]

References

  1. ^ Naenna, Oranee (2002). นามนี้มีที่มา [These names have origins] (in Thai). Bangkok: Praphansan. p. 60–61. ISBN  9789742308483.
  2. ^ Thakur Mahrotri, Pooja; Suwannakij, Supunnabul (3 April 2017). "Thai Billionaire Charoen Plans $3.5 Billion Bangkok Development". Bloomberg.com. Retrieved 21 June 2017.

13°44′0″N 100°32′45″E / 13.73333°N 100.54583°E / 13.73333; 100.54583