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Siem Reap Cambodia
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Siem Reap Cambodia
Siem Reap has colonial and Chinese-style architecture
in the Old French Quarter, and around the Old Market. In town, there are
Apsara dance performances, craft shops, silk farms, rice-paddy
countryside, fishing villages and a bird sanctuary near the Tonle Sap
Lake.
Siem Reap today, being a popular tourist destination, has a great deal
of hotels and restaurants. Mostly smaller establisments are concentrated
around the Old Market area, while more expensive hotels are located
between Angkor International Airport and the town along National Road 6.
There are a variety of mid-range hotels and restaurants along Sivatha,
and budget to mid-range hotels in the Phsar Leu area.
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The Province |
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The Wat and Water |
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All Thing Tourist |
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Accessibility |
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Angkor Wat temple
Angkor Thom Temple
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Siem Reap is small charming gateway town to the world
famous heritage the Angkor temples. Thanks to those attractions, Siem
Reap has transformed itself into a major tourist hub. Siem Reap nowadays
is a vibrant town with modern hotels and architectures. Despite
international influences, Siem Reap and the people have conserved much
of its image, culture and traditions.
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The town is a cluster of small villages along the
Siem Reap River. Those villages are originally developed around Buddhist
pagodas (Wat) which are almost evenly-spaced along the river from Wat
Preah En Kau Sei in the north until Wat Phnom Krom in the south, where
the Siem Reap River meets the great Tonle Sap Lake.
The main town is concentrated around Sivutha Street and the Psar Chas
area (Old Market area) where you can find old colonial buildings,
shopping and commercial districts. The Wat Bo area is now full of
guesthouses and restaurants while the Psar Leu area is often crowded
with local commerce. Other fast developing areas are the airport road
and main road to Angkor where you can find a number of large upscale
hotels and resorts.
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Businesses centered around tourism flourish thanks to
the tourism boom. There are a wide range of hotels ranging from several
5-star hotels and chic resorts, to hundreds of budget guesthouses. A
large selection of restaurants offer all kind of food including Italian,
French, German, Russian, Thai, Korean, Japanese, and Burmese. Plenty of
shopping opportunities are around the Psar Chas area while the nightlife
is often vibrant with a number of western-styled pubs and bars.
Most tourists come to Siem Reap to visit the Angkor Wat, Angkor
Thom,(about 6Km north of the city),and other Angkor ruins. While those
are still the main attractions, there are plenty of other things to
experience such as a dinner with an Apsara Dance performance, a trip to
fishing villages and bird sanctuary, a visit to a craft workshop and
silk farm, or a bicycle tour around the rice paddies in the country
side.
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The town is 7Km from the Angkor international
airport(IATA code REP). Siem Reap is accessible by direct flight from
Phnom Penh, Singapore, Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, Vientaine, Hanoi, Hong
Kong and Taipei, and by land from Phnom Penh and Thai border. It’s also
accessible by boats from Phnom Pen
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