Browse trains, buses, canal boats, river boats and airport rail from one place, then open the lines, stations and nearby residences.
Choose a station to center the map and show nearby listings.
Blue Line
Purple Line
Yellow Line
Pink Line
Gray Line
Orange Line
Brown 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.
Résidences dans le rayon
Choisis une station sur la carte.
Station details
Rama 9 Bridge
สะพานพระราม 9
Skytrain · Gray Line Future station
Description
Rama 9 Bridge on this Gray Line record should be read as a future bridge-and-river-access station area at the southern end of the corridor 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, and a recent JICA public report explicitly describes the Gray Line as extending from Rama 4 to Rama 9 Bridge. The stored point sits in the lower Rama III belt close to the Chao Phraya crossing system, which gives this station a clearer gateway role than the more interior neighborhood stops just to the north.
The area already has strong property meaning today. Official BTS material confirms the active BRT Sathorn-Ratchaphruek corridor supporting current movement along Rama III, and official Yan Nawa district information anchors the location in an established Bangkok district. The bridge identity matters here: the Rama IX Bridge is a major, named crossing over the Chao Phraya and one of the infrastructure markers that organize perception of the lower corridor. Central Pattana's Central Rama 3 remains the strongest retail and family-services anchor nearby, but this station reads slightly differently because it combines road frontage, river-crossing identity and southern gateway movement.
For property work, the strongest thesis is a future bridge-and-corridor mixed-use gateway: commuter condos, upper-mid rentals, family apartments, serviced housing, logistics-support offices, convenience retail, food frontage and selective mixed-use infill. Krungsri supports the broader transit-linked housing case in Greater Bangkok, while CBRE helps frame expectations around mature Bangkok districts where new transport usually reinforces existing demand. Because the station remains unbuilt and station-specific public detail is still limited, `needs-more-sources` remains the more careful designation.