Lumpini Park
Bangkok's beloved 142-acre city park — a free green sanctuary with monitor lizards, rowing boats, jogging paths, and dawn tai chi groups. The perfect escape from Bangkok's concrete heat, popular with expats, digital nomads, and locals alike. Always open; most atmospheric at sunrise.

About this Place
Lumpini Park is Bangkok's green lung — a 142-acre escape from the concrete and traffic of the surrounding Silom and Sukhumvit districts. Named after the birthplace of the Buddha in Nepal, the park was a gift to the Thai people from King Rama VI in the early 20th century, and it remains one of the most cherished public spaces in the city. The park's most surprising residents are its monitor lizards — large, prehistoric-looking reptiles that can reach up to two metres in length and sun themselves along the lakeside paths with complete indifference to the humans around them. Boat rentals on the central lake are a Bangkok tradition, particularly popular on weekends. Early mornings see the park at its most atmospheric: groups practising tai chi, aerobics classes, and solo runners circling the well-maintained tracks as dawn light filters through the trees. It is one of the few places in Bangkok where you can genuinely hear birds. Weekend evenings sometimes feature open-air concerts at the park's bandstand. The surrounding area is home to a large expat and digital nomad community, and the park serves as a natural meeting point. For those staying in Silom, Sathorn, or Sukhumvit, Lumpini is a short walk and a near-essential part of any longer Bangkok stay. Entry is always free. MRT Lumpini or MRT Si Lom stations provide direct access.
Location
13.7307, 100.5418
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