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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

Rama 9 Bridge

สะพานพระราม 9

Skytrain · Gray Line Future station

Sale median N/A
Rent median N/A
Coordinates 13.68775, 100.51668
Station order Future

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.