The Dusit Maha Prasat audience hall
The Dusit Maha Prasat was built as a Royal audience hall in 1789 by King Rama I. It is located next to the strange Thai State ceremonial Chakri Mahaprasad Hall which is an Italian renaissance influenced building with a roof that is in a traditional Thai architectural style. The white walls and glazed roof tiles of red, gold and green with gold trim roof of the Dusit Maha Prasat complements the larger younger Chakri Mahaprasad Hall. The roof of the Dusit Maha Prasat culminates in a gilded mongkut, a spire shaped like the king's crown, which symbolizes the 33 Buddhist levels of perfection. Each tier of the roof bears a typical chofa, a slender, stylized bird's-head finial, and several hang hong (swans' tails), which represent three-headed nagas.
The Dusit Maha Prasat audience hallThe Dusit Maha Prasat was built as a Royal audience hall in 1789 by King Rama I. It is located next to the strange Thai State ceremonial Chakri Mahaprasad Hall which is an Italian renaissance influenced building with a roof that is in a traditional Thai architectural style. The white walls and glazed roof tiles of red, gold and green with gold trim roof of the Dusit Maha Prasat complements the larger younger Chakri Mahaprasad Hall. The roof of the Dusit Maha Prasat culminates in a gilded mongkut, a spire shaped like the king's crown, which symbolizes the 33 Buddhist levels of perfection. Each tier of the roof bears a typical chofa, a slender, stylized bird's-head finial, and several hang hong (swans' tails), which represent three-headed nagas.
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