Private Bangkok Tour By Van – Customizable
Address
Bangkok, Thailand
GPS
13.8245796, 100.6224463
Experience Thailand your way on this Private Bangkok tour by van. This customized trip, ideal for families and bigger parties, brings you to Bangkok’s most famous landmarks in a fraction of the time it takes to utilize public transportation.
Visit the Grand Palace, which has been home to kings for generations, the Temple of the Reclining Buddha, which is regarded as Thailand’s first university, the Temple of the Dawn, which has a high spire, the Temple of the Golden Buddha, and Bangkok’s bustling Chinatown. Lunch, tickets, and transfers are all included in your all-inclusive package.
Highlights
- Enjoy Bangkok with your own private air-conditioned vehicle.
- Experience Bangkok at your own pace. You can visit any part of the city as per your convenience as you do not need to follow any fixed time schedule. We can arrange the most comfortable vehicle and the best of our drivers for your pick up from the hotel
Private Bangkok Tour By Van – Customizable
Enjoy Bangkok with your own private air-conditioned vehicle. Experience Bangkok at your own pace. You can visit any part of the city as per your convenience as you do not need to follow any fixed time schedule. We can arrange the most comfortable vehicle and the best of our drivers for your pick up from the hotel and drop you back at the end of the day.
Itinerary
The Grand Palace
The Grand Palace is Bangkok’s largest and most impressive complex, located in the city’s heart and surrounded by universities. It is the former residence of the king, and it is regarded as a national symbol and treasure by the Thai people. When King Rama I relocated the capital from Thonburi to Bangkok in 1782, he erected the Grand Palace. New buildings were created as new monarchs came to power over the years; unlike other palaces, these buildings are all independent, rather than extending over time.
Wat Phra Chetuphon
Wat Pho was the Royal Temple of Chakri Dynasty King Rama I, and was officially named Wat Prachetuphon Vimon Mangkararam. Wat Pho, one of Bangkok’s most frequented Buddhist temples, was founded in the 16th century. The revered 46-meter Reclining Buddha with finely inlaid mother-of-pearl feet may be found in the main ordination hall.
Wat Pho is known among Thais as “the nation’s first public university.” Around the shrine are 1,360 marble inscriptions representing medical, historical, and liberal sciences. The foundations of Thai traditional massage principles can be found in the marble inscriptions of medical sciences, anatomy, and orthopedics, which has made Wat Pho a world-famous location as the home of Thai massage.
Temple Of Dawn (Wat Arun)
Wat Arun is located on the banks of the Chao Praya River and is named after the Hindu god Aruna. Wat Chaeng is the local name for it. Since the Ayutthaya Kingdom began in the 12th century, this region has been home to a temple, Wat Makok. It hosted the Emerald Buddha until it was moved to Wat Phra Kaew in the early 1800s.
Wat Arun is known as the “Temple of Dawn” because its main stupa (prang), unlike all other temples in the city, is built in the Khmer style and adorned with porcelain diamonds. On top is a seven-pronged trident known as Shiva’s. Mount Meru, a sacred five-peaked mountain that serves as the link between the physical, metaphysical, and spiritual universes in Buddhist and Hindu cosmology, is symbolized by the ‘prang.’
Temple of the Golden Buddha (Wat Traimit)
Wat Arun is located on the banks of the Chao Praya River and is named after the Hindu god Aruna. Wat Chaeng is the local name for it. Since the Ayutthaya Kingdom began in the 12th century, this region has been home to a temple, Wat Makok. It hosted the Emerald Buddha until it was moved to Wat Phra Kaew in the early 1800s.
Wat Arun is known as the “Temple of Dawn” because its main stupa (prang), unlike all other temples in the city, is built in the Khmer style and adorned with porcelain diamonds. On top is a seven-pronged trident known as Shiva’s. Mount Meru, a sacred five-peaked mountain that serves as the link between the physical, metaphysical, and spiritual universes in Buddhist and Hindu cosmology, is symbolized by the ‘prang.’
Bangkok’s Chinatown
Bangkok’s Chinatown is one of the world’s largest Chinatowns. It was created in 1782 as the capital of the Rattanakosin Kingdom and served as the home of the city’s predominantly Teochew immigrant Chinese population, which quickly became the city’s dominant ethnic group.
The streets are lined with vibrant marketplaces, narrow alleyways loaded with tiny businesses, traditional drug stores, and numerous temples, making it an ideal area to walk and explore. The primary region is centered around Yaowarat road, and it is here that you will be able to see how the original Chinese settlers live today among the Thai people of Bangkok.