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Brown Line

Transit and property access

Brown Line

Brown Line: 22 stations · 23 listings · 262 residences.

Station details

Nawamin 42

นวมินทร์ 42

Skytrain · Brown Line Future station

Sale median N/A
Rent median N/A
Coordinates 13.79525, 100.65129
Station order Future

Description

Nawamin 42 on this Brown Line record should be treated as a future station area on the south-central Nawamin corridor rather than as an operating rapid-transit stop. MRTA's current Brown Line project page still describes the Khae Rai-Lam Sali line as an under-preparation project, and its route-alignment material shows the line turning at the Nawamin Road junction and then continuing south along Nawamin Road past major intersections including Si Burapha, Happy Land, and Bang Kapi. That makes this record part of a real planned urban corridor, but not yet an active rail stop. Bangkok Metropolitan Administration material also confirms that Nawamin belongs to Bueng Kum district, which helps anchor the station in a real district geography instead of a loose transport label.

What matters locally is that the corridor here reads as lived-in and service-rich rather than purely transitional. The stored point for Nawamin 42 sits slightly south of the broader park-and-campus anchors used for the previous stations, inside a low- to mid-rise urban fabric shaped by arterial road frontage, townhouse compounds, local retail, clinics, and practical daily-needs movement. The strongest named amenity still available from official and explicit-license sources is Nawamin Phirom Park, while NIDA remains the clearest recognized academic landmark on the wider east Nawamin-Seri Thai side of the catchment. Even so, this section of the Brown alignment still reads more like a practical local-access corridor than a major destination node.

For property work, the strongest reading is a future neighborhood-access transit thesis: commuter condos, family apartments, rental units, townhouse clusters, roadside service offices, food frontage and selective mixed-use assets. Krungsri supports the broader transit-linked housing case in Greater Bangkok, while CBRE helps keep assumptions disciplined outside Bangkok core prime markets. Because station-specific public detail remains thinner than the route, district and corridor evidence, a `needs-more-sources` status remains more defensible than `ok`.