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Thailand travel by train from Bangkok to Chiang Mai on the Northern Line offers visits to a series of former capitals – we hopped on board

  • Beginning with the current capital, Bangkok, we went on a whistle-stop tour through Ayutthaya and Sukhothai to Chiang Mai, taking in all the ancient sites
  • The most dazzling stretch of railway sees the train rise from the rice fields of Thailand’s central plain and snake into the forested highlands of Chiang Mai

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Chiang Mai Railway Station is the end of the Northern Line, Thailand’s second longest route. Photo: Thomas Bird

Built in the Neo-Renaissance style, Bangkok’s Hua Lamphong railway station is a rare architectural beauty. The 106-year-old terminus was due to close last winter but rumours of its demise appear to have been greatly exaggerated, as Mark Twain might have put it.

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Six months after the shutters were supposed to come down, Hua Lamphong remains open, an outpouring of nostalgic remonstrations online having provoked a rethink by Thai authorities. And it’s hard to think of a more fitting point of departure for a journey through Thailand’s history along the Northern Line than this splendid old station.

As commuters stand for the 8am daily broadcast of the national anthem, I sip a coffee on the second-floor balcony. When the music’s over, I hurry to the platform to get seated on the 75 Express.

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A third-class ticket buys me only ceiling fans to help ward off the bugs and tropical heat. Yet there are advantages to travelling on the cheap, including the mixture of aromas and sounds that floods the open carriage.

Hua Lamphong station, in Bangkok, was built in a neo-Renaissance style in imitation of Frankfurt Main Station. It opened in 1906. Photo: Thomas Bird
Hua Lamphong station, in Bangkok, was built in a neo-Renaissance style in imitation of Frankfurt Main Station. It opened in 1906. Photo: Thomas Bird

Outside, Bangkok reels by in all its eclectic glory. Slums stand a stone’s throw from grand official buildings, gilded high-rise blocks and, eventually, Bang Sue Grand Station, the behemoth built to supplant Hua Lamphong as the Thai capital’s main station.

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