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Gray Line

Transit and property access

Gray Line

Gray Line: 39 stations · 1,702 listings · 136 residences · median sale ฿186,285/m² · median rent ฿707/m²/mo.

Station details

Charoen Krung

เจริญกรุง

Skytrain · Gray Line Future station

Sale median N/A
Rent median N/A
Coordinates 13.69467, 100.49948
Station order Future

Description

Charoen Krung on this Gray Line record should be read as a future historic-riverfront corridor station area rather than as a generic future stop. MRTA's Grey Line Phase 1 material confirms the line remains future-facing as it continues south through the Naradhiwas spine toward the lower river-facing districts, while the stored point sits close to the Charoen Krung side of Bang Kho Laem. That matters because Charoen Krung is not just a road name: it is one of Bangkok's best-known historic urban corridors, with a built identity shaped by older commercial frontage, mixed-use blocks, river-related activity and long-established neighborhood life.

The area already has strong real-estate meaning before any Gray Line opening. Official BTS material confirms the active BRT Sathorn-Ratchaphruek corridor, which still supports movement along Rama III today, and Bang Kho Laem district material anchors the broader river-facing setting of the station catchment. Wikimedia and structured place data for Charoen Krung Road reinforce its identity as a major Bangkok thoroughfare, while Asiatique The Riverfront adds a recognized destination anchor tied directly to Charoen Krung Road and the Chao Phraya river edge. Compared with the more interior stations upstream, this stop reads as a more historic, frontage-driven and river-adjacent mixed-use pocket.

For property work, the strongest thesis is a future historic-riverfront mixed-use gateway: commuter condos, rentals, renovated shophouses, boutique hospitality, food frontage, river-adjacent retail and selective mixed-use infill. Krungsri supports the broader transit-linked housing case in Greater Bangkok, while CBRE helps ground expectations around mature Bangkok districts where accessibility gains tend to reinforce existing demand rather than create a new market from zero. Because the station remains unbuilt and public station-specific detail is still limited, `needs-more-sources` remains the more careful designation.