Miles away in Thailand, few blocks away from Khao San Road sits New
World, a four-storey, roofless, abandoned mall on the corner of Banglamphu
Intersection. The building’s flooded basement now serves as a home for
thousands of fish and is arguably home to the most exotic underwater species in
Bangkok.
Back in the 80’s, Kaew Fah Plaza
Company Limited built New World as an 11-storey mall. The company was later
found in breach of a building law after it constructed seven more floors on top
of the approved construction blueprint. The mall was shut in 1997, and
unfortunate series of events occurred thereafter. The mall was set ablaze in
1999, causing some casualties and in 2004, one person was killed from
collapsing debris during a partial demolition. The mall’s fifth to eleventh
floors were eventually dismantled to be in line with the original plan and New
World has been roofless ever since.
With no roof,
rainwater unsurprisingly collected in the basement. The pool of static water
reared mosquitoes. Mosquitoes annoyed vendors in the neighborhood. To fix this
problem, some vendors released a bunch of fish into the pool so as to curb
mosquito breeding. Quickly, that bunch of fish reproduced into thousands. In
2011, New World closed its doors after a huge number of locals visited the mall
to sight the unseen, 500-square-meter fishpond… here is something taken from Daily Mail and
other web news sites.
It the bizarre story of how a derelict shopping plaza in
Thailand became natural urban aquarium to thousands of giant catfish, carp and
tilapia, aided by the combination of heavy rainfall and mosquito larvae. Over the years the structure became home to
more than 3,000 fish; however, now the abandoned shopping center is set for
demolition. Over the weekend workers
clubbed together to clear the pond-like ground-floor of creatures.
It was once home to
dozens of fashion stores - that was before the fish moved in. The derelict place, the combination of heavy
rainfall and mosquito larvae made it the perfect breeding ground for amphibians. Though there were worries that it could be a
hotbed for disease, enterprising vendors were selling bags of fish food to
tourists for around 35 cents. The roofless New World department store, which
fell into disrepair following a fire, and which was a fish pond literally is
now set for demolition. Government officials feared the structure
could disintegrate at any time, with escalators and walkways on the brink of
collapse.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
16th Jan 2015.
