Sometimes it’s the mundane things that catch your eyes.
There are so many temples in Thailand that are located atop a mountain hill, and the only way that leads up there is through a long range of hundreds of stairs, which actually makes it physically challenging to pay a visit to the temple.
But then of course, it makes it a very special experience. However, if it’s easy and convenient to go there, there’s nothing special about it. If climbing the Mount Everest would be as easy as, lets say, visiting Disneyland, it wouldn’t be nearly as great an experience for those who do it.
So when I saw the elevator, I thought: not so cool.

The Temple Elevator
But of course, for some people in that temple and maybe some elderly monks or layperson with knee problems, an elevator must come as a true blessing.
It’s just another example of the wild fusion of ancient and modern lifestyles in Bangkok. When I first came to it, it seemed like such a contrast to me, the old and the new, tradition and development. But contrast really isn’t the right word in the case of Thailand. It’s fusion. They just mix it together, almost like putting it in a blender, and it creates something that is unique, modern, fascinating, and at the same time traditional.
By the way – if you’re wondering where this is… it’s also in Wat Samphanthawongsaram Worawiharn in Chinatown. (That temple is not nearly as popular as Wat Traimit for example, because it’s kind of in a “hidden soi”, and lacks a major sensation like the Golden Buddha that the Traimit temple has).