Muang Thong Thani is a large real estate development in Pak Kret, a northern suburb city of Bangkok, in Thailand's Nonthaburi Province. It was mainly developed from the late 1980s by the Bangkok Land Company under the leadership of Anant Kanjanapas, and was envisioned as a satellite city along the lines of the new towns of Hong Kong. It was rapidly built in the early 1990s amid Thailand's booming economy, but ground to a halt with the 1997 Asian financial crisis, a rise and fall that epitomizes Thailand's real estate bubble of the 1990s. Muang Thong Thani's development has since mostly been focused around its Impact exhibition and convention centre, one of the largest in Southeast Asia, built upon facilities created for the 1998 Asian Games.
The towering Lake View Condominiums, seen across the central lake
The Lake View Condominiums form a large edifice along the length of Bond Street.
Impact Arena, part of the original Asian Games venue, is now a major event space and concert hall.
The original main street into the development is lined by shophouses, as seen in 2012.
Pak Kret is a city in Nonthaburi province, Thailand. It lies in the Central Thai plains on the east bank of the lower Chao Phraya River, bordering Bangkok to the east, Mueang Nonthaburi district of Nonthaburi province to the south, and Pathum Thani province to the north. It is part of the Bangkok Metropolitan Region megalopolis. With a registered population of 190,272, Pak Kret is the third most populous city municipality in Thailand.
Seal
Pak Kret waterfront viewed from Rama IV Bridge. The high-rises of Muang Thong Thani are visible in the background to the left