Suan
Luang, or Royal Park has become Suan Siang, Noise Park. A majestic park of 80
hectares on the outskirts of Bangkok, it is visited by 10,000 to 25,000 visitors
on weekdays. A park of great variety and beauty it is under the administration
of the Department of Social Welfare. But as has
happened to other parks under city administration, at a certain stage of
development of the park where a policy of maintenance would have been best,
allowing nature to mature naturally, a manic and irresponsible change in policy
has occurred. Loudspeakers have been installed everywhere in
the park, at about thirty meter intervals and all sense of peace banished from
this onetime haven of quiet. Inane radio programmes swamp the sound of leaves
swaying in the breeze and birds are frightened away.
The
noise we hoped to avoid follows us to this one time refuge. Park employees enter
into the spirit of things and leave the doors of pick up trucks open while
powerful audio systems further spew out conflicting sources of noise. Attendants
in sales kiosks and toilets play radios at full blast; is this the policy of the
park or is it their private initiative? It seems that all policy of restricting
the circulation of motor traffic is abandoned as young people ride in threes on
noisy motor cycles around the once quiet paths. When I asked one of the park
attendants he admitted the changes but could not explain why they were
occurring.
It
was a park where children could learn about nature and quiet beauty. Now they
will learn that relaxation and "fun" must be accompanied by noise.
Do
the Directors of the park know anything about park administration? Are they
aware that noise increases tension and blood pressure? Do they not know that
parks are administered with great attention to noise levels and the limitation
of noise sources?
It will
only get worse as more noise will call for louder "entertainment".
Next
« Prev Post
« Prev Post
Previous
Next Post »
Next Post »
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)