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Parks & Nature in Chiang Mai

🇹🇭 Chiang Mai, Thailand

Parks & Nature in Chiang Mai

Gardens, parks, riverside segments, and green routes. Explore 3 curated stops in Chiang Mai, including Wat Phra Singh, Chiang Mai Night Bazaar, and Warorot Market. Highlights include Wat Phra Singh, rated 4.7/5 by 3,647 visitors.

3 stops ~1h 30m Available in app

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3 places in this collection

Parks & Nature places

3 places in this collection

Wat Phra Singh Image by Dennis Jarvis, CC BY-SA 2.0

Wat Phra Singh

Wat Phra Singh is a Buddhist temple. King Ananda Mahidol (Rama VIII), bestowed upon it the status of Royal temple of the first grade in 1935. The main entrance is guarded by Singhs (lions). Wat Pra Singh is situated at the end of the main street (Rachadamnoen road) of Chiang Mai. The road runs east from the temple, via Tapae Gate, to the Ping River. The temple houses an important Buddha statue: the Phra Buddha Sihing which gives the temple its name. The origins of this statue are unknown but, according to legend, it was based on the lion of Shakya, a statue since lost which used to be housed in the Mahabodhi Temple of Bodh Gaya (India). The Phra Buddha Sihing statue is supposed to have been brought, via Ceylon (present day Sri Lanka), to Ligor (present day Nakhon Si Thammarat) and, from there, via Ayutthaya, to Chiang Mai. There are two more Buddha statues in Thailand which are claimed to be the Phra Buddha Sihing: one is housed in Wat Phra Mahathat in the city of Nakhon Si Thammarat and another one the Bangkok National Museum. It is alleged that the head of the statue had been stolen in 1922. The possibility remains that the present statue (or maybe only the head) is a copy. Every year, during the Songkran festival, the statue is taken from wihan Lai Kham and carried through the streets of Chiang Mai in a religious procession during which the spectators honour the statue by sprinkling water over it.

Chiang Mai Night Bazaar Image by calflier001 CC BY-SA 2.0

Chiang Mai Night Bazaar

Chiang Mai Night Bazaar or just Night Bazaar is directly east of the city moat, between it and the Ping River, on Chang Khlan Road, between Tha Phae and Sridonchai Roads. It is known for its handicrafts and portrait paintings. There are also jewelry, toys, clothing, and much more. The market is one of the most popular tourist attractions in Chiang Mai. At first, the market was owned by Chinese merchants, but it grew in size as more commercial buildings were built, and it was no longer owned by a single group of people. Instead, there are many owners, and most of them are Thai.

Warorot Market Image by Department of Tourism Thailand: LannaPhoto, CC BY-SA 3.0

Warorot Market

It is a major market selling local foods such as sour pork, Northern Thai spicy sausage, Vietnamese-style sausage, chili paste, etc. It opens from morning to evening. The market at the back of the Ping River is the flower market. At night, there are fresh flowers for sale. Warorot Market is located where Chang Moi Road and Witchayanon Road converge. it can also accessed from the corner of Lao Jok Alley. It opens in early morning. Some of the shops open since 5 a.m. Clothes and souvenirs shops are closed at about 6 - 7 p.m. However, the alley next to the market opens to 11 p.m. This market has a long history. Originally, the current location was the place of the crematorium for funerals and the mortuary urns of many Chiang Mai rulers. After Dararatsami, the wife of King Chulalongkorn ordered to move those mortuary urns to Wat Suan Dok and collected her own money and money from Intrawarorot, the ruler of Chiang Mai in that period to build a market in this area. Warorot Market was named after the name of Intrawaroro. The local have called it Kad Luang until now.

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