Transport in Thailand

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

A large number of buses, minibuses and taxis share the streets with private vehicles at Ratchadamri Road, Bangkok.
Tuk-tuks
are one mode of public transport in Bangkok and other cities in Thailand.

Transport in Thailand is varied, with no one dominant means of transport. For long distance travel, bus transport dominates. Low-speed rail travel has long been a rural long-distance transport mechanism, though plans are underway to expand services with high-speed rail lines extending to several major regions of Thailand. Road transportation is the primary form of freight transport across the country.

For short trips motorbikes are common. There are public motorcycle taxis in Bangkok, Pattaya, and other large cities. An overwhelming number of taxis can also be found in Bangkok. Since the country's first rapid rail transit line opened in 1999 in Bangkok, daily ridership on Bangkok's various transit lines has risen to over 800,000, with multiple additional lines either under construction or being proposed.

Private automobiles, whose rapid growth contributed to Bangkok's notorious traffic congestion over the past two decades, have risen in popularity, especially among tourists, expats, the upper class, and the growing middle class. A motorway network across Thailand has been gradually implemented, with motorways completed in Bangkok and most of central Thailand.

Domestic air transport, which had been dominated by a select few air carriers, saw a surge in popularity since 2010 due in large part to the expanding services of low-cost carriers such as Thai Air Asia and Nok Air.

Areas with navigable waterways often have boats or boat service, and many innovative means of transport exist such as

tuk-tuk, vanpool, songthaew
, and even elephants in rural areas.

Rail transport

Hua Lamphong Railway Station
.
Second-class sleeping carriage of the State Railway of Thailand at Hua Lamphong Railway Station

The

Lat Krabang
are the main freight terminals.

As of 2017 SRT had 4,507 km (2,801 mi) of track, all of it

meter gauge except the Airport Link. Nearly all is single-track (4,097 km), although some important sections around Bangkok are double (303 km or 188 mi) or triple-tracked (107 km or 66 mi) and there are plans to extend this.[1] By comparison, Thailand has 390,000 km (242,335 miles) of highways.[2]

The SRT has long been perceived by the public as inefficient and resistant to change. Trains are usually late, and most of its equipment is old and poorly maintained. The worst financially performing state enterprise, the SRT consistently operates at a loss despite being endowed with large amounts of property and receiving large government budgets; it reported a preliminary loss of 7.58 billion baht in 2010.[3] Recurring government attempts at restructuring and/or privatization throughout the 2000s have always been strongly opposed by the union and have not made any progress.[4][5]

There are two active rail links to adjacent countries. The line to

Myanmar is defunct (see Death Railway). A projected extension will rebuild the route[6] and in 2011 a link was also proposed from Kanchanaburi to Port Dawei
.

Rail transport in Bangkok includes long-distance services, and some daily commuter trains running from and to the outskirts of the city during the rush hour, but passenger numbers have remained low. There are also three rapid transit rail systems in the capital.

Rail rapid transit systems

Bangkok BTS skytrain at Mo Chit BTS station
Bangkok Metro at Si Lom MRT station

Bangkok Metropolitan Region

Bangkok is served by four rail rapid transit systems:

  • MRT, with four lines.
  • Bangkok Skytrain
    or BTS, with three lines.
  • Suvarnabhumi Airport Link
    or ARL, with one line.
  • SRT Red Lines, with two lines.

Khon Kaen

In March 2016, the Thai government approved the first LRT project in Khon Kaen province, to be built by the private sector. The first phase of the project will be a 26 km North-South route. Previously, this corridor was intended to be served by a bus rapid transit route. The Office of Transport and Traffic Policy (OTP) will fund an 8-month project study for Khon Kaen University with 38 million baht. The Khon-Kaenpattanmong or Khon Kaen Think Tank, a private company, will be the main investor in the project and responsible for the operation of the network. The Phase 1 budget is estimated at 1.5 billion baht.[7]

As of 2020, construction has yet to start.[8]

Other Provinces