Rethinking Victory Monument: Bangkok’s busiest bus hub
As one of the capital’s busiest roundabouts, Victory Monument has long functioned less as a designed transport hub than as a living organism.
Every day, thousands of commuters spill out of the BTS Skytrain and descend to four crowded islands, navigating a maze of bus stops, van queues, motorcycle taxis and improvised waiting areas that have taken shape over decades.
These islands – Ratchawithi, Phahol Yothin, Din Daeng and Phaya Thai – have long carried the weight of Bangkok’s bus network, even as the system around them evolved.
Over time, smaller elements have been added, signage shifted, and operators have carved out space where they could. What has emerged is not a single master plan, but a layered patchwork of adaptations.
Now, for the first time since the monument’s official opening 84 years ago, the city is undertaking a comprehensive redesign of this space.
Scheduled for completion of its first phase in mid-2026, the project marks Bangkok’s first major investment in a bus hub designed specifically around the needs of low-income commuters who rely on it most.
It also signals a shift in how the city approaches public transport. Instead of organizing space around vehicles, the redesign begins with people.
The transformation is being led by three design teams working in tandem. Urban Ally conducted detailed behavioral research on how commuters use space.
PAVA Architects translated those insights into architectural form, while LANDPROCESS led the landscape design, shaping the public realm to support movement and improve the outdoor environment.
For Waritthorn Suksabai of Bangkok City Lab, who has worked with the project, the challenge extends beyond design. He sees Victory Monument as a test of how the city manages shared infrastructure.
For decades, the space has been shaped by multiple agencies working in parallel, often without coordination. The result is the fragmented environment commuters experience today.
“Victory Monument is not just a design challenge, but a governance one. Its future depends on how well agencies can work together.”
That institutional complexity sets the stage for redesign, which begins not with construction, but with understanding how the space actually works.
The process kicked off through observation rather than with drawings.
“Don’t obstruct the flow of commuters,” said Piya Limpiti of Urban Ally, describing the guiding principle behind the research. Design, she added, must follow how people actually move, not the other way around.
Urban Ally mapped how passengers moved across the four islands through a combination of snapshot counts and continuous tracking.
Using half-hour interval photography from 6 in the morning until 9 at night on a typical Friday, the team documented fluctuations in crowd density throughout the day.
Double-parking at bus stops is a common sight in Bangkok. However, it is dangerous. As shown in the picture, the commuter following the bus is hidden from the view of the bus drivers, putting them at risk of injury or missing the bus.//Photo courtesy of BMA.
The data revealed distinct pressure points. Phahol Yothin Island recorded the highest evening peak, with 467 commuters between 7 and 7.30pm.
Morning congestion was most intense at Ratchawithi Island, with 333 commuters during the same half-hour window at 7am.
Din Daeng Island saw the busiest midday flow, reaching 378 between noon and 12.30pm.
Beyond numbers, the team tracked 100 individuals to understand how people actually navigate the space.
Two dominant movement patterns emerged. On Ratchawithi and Phahol Yothin Islands, pedestrians followed branching routes along a central axis that spread outward. On Din Daeng and Phaya Thai Islands, where van services dominate, movement formed looping patterns within more confined areas.
What these patterns revealed was not chaos but consistency. Commuters take the most direct routes between entry points and transport links, improvising when paths are blocked.
“The behavior is actually very simple,” Piya said. “People just want the shortest, clearest path. When the system doesn’t give them that, they create it themselves.”
The conclusion was clear. The problem is not how people move, but that the infrastructure fails to support how they naturally move.
Over time, the accumulation of uncoordinated additions has made the space harder to navigate. Redundant signage, misplaced barriers and outdated equipment have narrowed walkways and created blind corners.
Accessibility has suffered. Uneven surfaces and unclear circulation routes make the hub difficult for wheelchair users, elderly passengers and the visually impaired.
Yet despite these shortcomings, Victory Monument remains one of the city’s most important multimodal nodes, linking buses, passenger vans, motorcycle taxis, ride-hailing services and the BTS. Increasingly,
it serves commuters who have fewer transport options and depend on buses as their primary mode of travel.
The research established a clear hierarchy to guide the redesign: commuters first, then pedestrian flow, with vehicles organized by the number of passengers they carry.
Double-parking at bus stops is a common sight in Bangkok. However, it is dangerous. As shown in the picture, the commuter following the bus is hidden from the view of the bus drivers, putting them at risk of injury or missing the bus.//Photo courtesy of BMA
Buses, as the backbone of the system, take top priority, followed by passenger vans and app-based ride-sharing services. The goal is to allocate space according to public benefit, not operational convenience.
PAVA Architects translated these principles into a design that emphasizes clarity, comfort and flow.
Waiting areas will be properly defined, with shelter and seating that allow passengers to rest without obstructing movement, while walkways will be widened and cleared of unnecessary obstacles to align with the paths commuters already use.
“Design should follow function, and function should follow people,” said Pacharapan Ratananakorn of PAVA Architects.
Retail space, once scattered across the islands in the form of small food stalls, will be reduced to make way for movement, reflecting a shift in commuter behavior.
Passengers today tend to move quickly between connections rather than linger, often purchasing food on the go or relying on delivery services.
The four islands will also be unified through a consistent architectural system, with standardized components and materials allowing for easier maintenance and faster repairs.
Durability has been built into the design. Materials are selected to withstand heavy daily use while minimizing long-term upkeep. The scheme also draws on the realities of day-to-day operations, from bus drivers to cleaning staff, ensuring the space remains practical long after construction is complete.
Redesigning the hub thus requires not only physical changes, but also coordination between the agencies that regulate, operate and maintain it.
If the effort holds, the impact could reach beyond a single intersection. It would demonstrate that even long neglected, heavily used public transport spaces can be rethought through careful observation, technical precision and stronger coordination.
“Physical beauty isn’t always what matters most,” said Varat Limwibul of PAVA Architects. “Real beauty is designing for tired workers, making sure they have a comfortable place to sit and wait for the bus after a long and exhausting day.”
At Victory Monument, a place shaped by decades of improvisation, the city is attempting something new: designing for the way people actually move, and building a system that can finally keep up.
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Photo captions:
Bus Hub 2
Bus Hub 3 With no set layout, bus drivers improvise lanes, making passengers—like the one in the picture—likely to miss the bus in the second lane.//Photo courtesy of BMA.
Bus Hub 4 (Photo credit: This graphic shows the density of space usage by commuters in one day.//Photo courtesy of Urban Ally.
Bus Hub 5 Real beauty is designing for tired workers, making sure they have a comfortable place to sit and wait for the bus after a long and exhausting day.//Photo courtesy of PAVA Architects.
Bus Hub 6-7 The new bus hub is a human-centered space, designed to prioritize commuters.//Photo courtesy of Landprocess LANDPROCESS.