10 Years Tom Yum Goong Disease

When I was in Thailand, 2007 was the tenth anniversary of Asian economic crisis. The Thai Baht currency had been weakened by several attacks from international funds. Finally, the Thai Government at that time was forced to float the currency. The result of this bubble burst, aka Tom Yum Goong Disease, triggered the financial collapses throughout Asia.

Hopwell Project

Hopewell, Invisible Railtrack

Although Thailand have recovered from the crisis and paid off IMF’s bialout, there are still monumental traces of the melt down, especially, big projects stopped their constructions ten years ago. These are some of the unfinished enterprises in Bangkok: Hopewell Project, upper level train link from the old Bangkok Airport to the city, a building that has never been erected from the ground, a luxury apartment that has been painted only half way through, and a site that is converted into a street vendor park.

What did we learn from this expensive lesson?

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3 Trackbacks

  1. By Stilgherrian · “Tom Yum Goong Disease” on Tuesday 5 February 2008 at 11:46 am

    [...] photos of the urban decay in Bangkok are much better than [...]

  2. By Out to Space » Demolishing Old House on Wednesday 6 February 2008 at 11:23 am

    [...] the last photo essay about on-hold construction sites due to the economic meltdown a decade ago, this essay is looking at a fading memory of an aged [...]

  3. By Out to Space » Constructing Bangkok on Thursday 7 February 2008 at 11:17 am

    [...] Thailand has recovered from economic and political crisis, Bangkok is woken up by excavators and cranes again. Some sites are revived [...]

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