::: INTRODUCTION :::
The
Rachamankha is much more than just a hotel. It is an experience. For the
owners, who are two of Thailand's most famous designers and architects, it is a
creation of love and a treasury of Lanna art and Chinese antiquities, which can
be found in every guest room and throughout the hotel. The combination of Lanna
art and interior design, and the temple style architecture has created a haven
of peace - the kind that penetrates you and touches your heart. This is an ideal
hotel for people in need of rest and relaxation
The
design of the hotel is taken from the viharn (chapel) of one Thailand's most
beautiful old temples, Wat Phrathat Lampang Luang in Lampang Province, which is
why the hotel looks and feels like a temple. The hotel is planned according to
ancient principles of Chinese architecture because the architect and interior
designer want the hotel to reflect the Chinese roots of Thai architecture. The
interior design is based on northern Thai Lanna culture, which is a blend of
Chinese, Dai, Laotian, Lua, and Burmese cultures. This accounts for why the
hotel is full of Chinese antiques and exemplifies the art and architectural
features of all of these cultures. Altogether, the hotel is a cultural
masterpiece one of the uppermost aims of creating the Rrachamankha was to enable
tourists to experience - feel and touch - genuine Lanna culture, even though it
will take many years to recoup the enormous cost of construction and decoration.
No expense has been spared to create this experience, and indeed, many items of
Lanna furniture and many of the decorative pieces of Lanna culture were bought
in Burmes, Lao and China.
The walls thrust out the hotel are made in an
ancient manner that goes back to Greco-Roman times and which is commonly used by
Thai temples. They are made from earthen bricks that are covered with a white
limestone plaster the takes two months to make, and which insulates the rooms so
well that they always feel cool, however hot it is outside. Earthen roof tiles,
which are a feature of Dai culture, also half to keep the rooms cool.
When you arrive, you enter the first courtyard,
which is guarded by two Ming dynasty lions. In front of you there is a gorgeous
and very rare jip tree, which is over 100 years old, and whose red flowers hang
down to the ground. The surface of the courtyard is made from handmade earthen
bricks. Reception is the room on your left, and is unlike any other Reception
area that you will have encountered. The doors are beautifully carved in Lanna
style, a large cloth hangs from the wall telling a story from the Vessantra
Jakata, and Chinese antiquities decorate the room. Even the Reception table is
an antique.
The main courtyard adjoins the first courtyard
and is split in two by a large open-air lounge, which has a tall temple style
roof and red wooden pillars. It is decorated tastefully with Chinese
antiquities, the doors are beautifully carves, and furniture is rattan and
classic Chinese, Chinese porcelain lamps and an antique chandelier in the centre
provide self lighting, while 12 rare nineteenth century paintings depiction
scenes from the Vessantra Jakata fable adorn the walls.
The courtyard garden is made up of small lawns and sweet-smelling,
white-flowered temple trees, and red and white bougainvillea, which enhance the
peacefulness. The guest rooms are located at the sides of the courtyard, under
an earthen tiled roof supported by a white colonnade that runs the full length
of each side. Old Lanna boxes and trunks are placed under the colonnades for
decoration.
::: HOTEL ADDRESS :::
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:: Rachamankha Chiangmai ::
6 Rachamanhka 9, T. Phra Singh,
A. Muang, Chiangmai 50200
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::: HOTEL FACILITIES :::
There is also a 20-metre swimming pool, which
is lined with sun beds and bougainvillea flowers. The airy Pool Bar offers
snacks and drinks, while the open-air room above provides a massage service.
The hotel also boasts a library with an
internet room; the only hotel in the north to provide this.
The service concept is based on the principle
of creating a memorable experience for all guests, and supports the
unforgettable feeling of peace and homeliness created by the hotel's
architecture and design. Overall, a stay at the Rachamankha is unique
::: RESTAURANTS & DINING :::
Next to the restaurant there is a small, shady
courtyard where guests can dine out side while listening to old northern Thai
music. The restaurant is illuminated by large Lanna lanterns, and beautifully
decorated with nineteenth century paintings that describe part of the life of
Lord Buddha on a large cloth that hangs down from the ceiling. Antique Chinese
tables and Ming Dynasty plates are placed tastefully along the sides of the
restaurant. The focus of the cuisine is Thai, but there is also a large
selection of fusion dishes that combine food, sauces, and flavorings from
Thailand, Vietnam, Japan, and Europe.
The Bar is situated next to the restaurant and
is decorated with a very rare Chinese antique liqueur screen, and lithographs by
Henry Moore, Robert Mother well, and other early twentieth century painters. The
screen shows in gold paint the whole process of tea production from the bust to
the ships exporting the packaged tea leaves.
Above the restaurant is the Gallery, shine
serves to educate guests about Lanna culture, and also to provide a meeting
room. It is filled with silverware, lacquer ware, hill tribe jewellery, a sword
collection, an eighteenth century Buddha image, and also with the post, plates,
etc., that were discovered when the hotel site was excavated.
::: ROOM AMENITIES :::
There are 18 Superior rooms, 4 Deluxe rooms,
and 1 Two-Bedroom suite. Each guest room is slightly different because the
furniture is antique, and each piece is different. The door is an old Lanna
style door with an ornate door handle and wooden bolts. The window blind is made
from bamboo, and reeds are used to make the colorful floor matting.
The table lamps are made from Chinese
porcelain, and a Lanna lantern with a tassel that matches the color of the
antique wardrobe hangs down in the centre of the room. Even the sink counter in
the bathroom is a Chinese antique. The walls are decorated with dais art from
Chan state in Myanmar. The Deluxe rooms differ from the Superior rooms in that
they are larger (42 m2 compared to 30 m2 ), have a four-pester bed, and look
down onto the main courtyard.