Kram
Image courtesy of Kram
Best remembered as a place to hang out with friends over beers and a few classic Thai dishes, the garden home sitting up Soi Sukhumvit 39 bid goodbye to diners in late Mayafter seven years of operation.
Thaisho yadong bar
Image courtesy of Thaisho
Located near BTS Ari in a two-story shophouse, the eclectic bar dedicated to hardcore, herb-infused Thai moonshines was tragically short-lived. Amid the third-wave outbreak of COVID-19 in April, the team behind it announced that they “cannot adapt anymore,” citing a lack of government support.
Find the Photo Booth
Image courtesy of Find the Photo Booth
Three years serving cocktails from a secret location (behind a photo booth, we can finally tell you) came to an end for Soi Sukhumvit 11’s Find the Photo Booth. Popular for its creativity on both sides of the bar, the team behind it hopes to find a way forward and was last seen looking for a new location to “relaunch” in the future.
Soul Food Mahanakorn
Image courtesy of Soul Food Mahanakorn
A Thonglor diner known for potent cocktails and top-notch, street food-inspired recipes was forced shut forever, with its owner blaming lockdown measures preventing the sale of alcohol. Months after celebrating his restaurant’s 10th anniversary, owner Jarrett Wrisley said the
booze ban and limited operating hours had inflicted pain in “unmanageable ways,” leading him to announce the bad news and leave Thailand after 13 years.
Ratchada Train Night Market
Image courtesy of Talat Rodfai
A large outdoor market more popular with tourists felt the pain when they stopped arriving. While its management has been reluctant to say that it’s gone for good – and
insists it will be back – the same team has in the meantime
opened a new venue a few kilometers away near the Central Rama 9 shopping mall.
Bei Otto
Image courtesy of Bei Otto
A German institution where untold schnitzel and pints were pounded for four decades said
auf wiedersehen to its home on Soi Sukhumvit 20. We paid a visit on its last day, and
you can read about it here.
Though its hallowed hall may be gone, fans of its on-brand pours of dark German lagers or authentic deli sauerkraut and meats can trek to a new location on Phetchaburi Road.
Hard Rock
Image courtesy of Hard Rock Cafe Bangkok / Facebook
For its 30th birthday, this rock-themed restaurant franchise serving fried comfort food to tourists worldwide announced in March that it was over for its multistory Siam Square branch, which opened there in 1991. Say what you will about Hard Rock’s bonafides, it meant the end of three decades of barbecued ribs, cheeseburgers, steaks and milkshakes washed down with countless live rock performances.
The fall of Scala
At left, Scala theater intact. At right, its demolition a Monday morning of Nov. 1. Images: Photo: Philip Jablon, Weerapon Singnoi / Foto_Momo
Bitter contempt may not be one of the stages of grief, but that’s what many felt just last month when the wrecking ball swung at art deco standalone cinema Scala. Just weeks earlier, assurances had been made that some of its architecturally significant structure would remain intact, even if the rest was to be gutted for a mall.
Instead, the whole beautiful thing was knocked down in a day’s time to make room for yet another shopping mall belonging to the great Central Pattana, the nation’s largest retail property developer.
The article originally appeared on Coconuts Bangkok.