Inside Bangkok’s Chinatown revival led by chefs, artists and entrepreneurs
A transformation is turning the area into a destination for locals and visitors, showcasing rich heritage and striking modernity

Although the area was outside Bangkok’s walls at the time of the city’s founding in 1782, it was in the 1890s, when King Rama V ordered the construction of major arteries Song Wat Road and Yaowarat Road, that the neighbourhood became rooted in geography and identity.


A few years ago, however, Win, the eldest, now 34 and an architect, along with his younger siblings Sun, Sandy and Sea, started to contemplate the buildings’ potential. The structures were always a bit quirky, with balconies on the facade and interior balustrades with neoclassical columns that set the shops apart from others in the area.
They thought about doing a big renovation and opening a hotel but lacked the expertise, not to mention customers, thanks to Covid-19. It took some time, but from restaurant pop-ups to concept stores, art exhibitions to workshops, by trial and error, they found their way.

Win and his siblings renamed their property Baan Trok Tua Ngork, or Beansprout Alley House, after the vegetable merchants who used to operate nearby. When the renovations were completed in 2022, the result was not exactly a restoration but more of a reimagining of the original shophouses as a single structure, joined behind the facade. Wooden doors have been preserved but the courtyard, once open to the elements, has been covered with a glass roof. Instead of replicating the original walls, surfaces are covered in tinted mirrors to reflect natural light. Colourful tiles, wooden doors and window shutters were repaired and repurposed as interior entrances or wall coverings.