Taipei sees the light

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/world/30360802

Taipei sees the light

World December 20, 2018 11:45

By The Nation

Christmasland returns to Taiwan with the biggest 3D projection mapping light shows staying on view until January 1.

This year’s theme is Space and Planet and the main venue, New Taipei City, has turned into a dream city. It is here that New York artist Jen Lewin is showcasing her interactive light-and-shadow art installation at The Pool and in a partnership with the Hexogon Solution, 45 high-end projectors are being used to project 3D mapping light shows to a total area of about the size of 17.6 basketball courts, including the Christmas trees and the New Taipei City Hall.

Some 900 tubes of RGB pixel-controlled LEDs, each of which can deliver 256 colors, are installed at the cloister on the second floor of the New Taipei City Hall and the advanced pixel-controlled lighting system provided by German’s Madrix is utilised to create a gigantic circular screen that runs from the New Taipei City Hall to the Christmas tree.

The master of best sound effects shortlisted by the Golden Horse Awards is responsible for making soundtracks for the main light shows. The vivid and delicate changes of light and shadow projected from more than 40,000 light bulbs in 360 degrees go up and down with the exciting music, turning the flat 3D light sculpture into stereoscopic 3D, which surrounds the audience and subverts the imagination.

This year’s decorations come in a rose-golden colour to create a romantic atmosphere and four different colours are used in the four light zones, namely the romantic Rose Golden Star Overpass, the dream-like Pink Star Overpass, the Galaxy Star Overpass in cold-white, and the Blue Light Star Overpass.

Also available is the Fantasy Planet, a giant ball-like artwork made with more than 100,000 LED lights that performs a brilliant light show from 5.30 to 10pm.

Find out more at https://Christmasland.ntpc.gov.tw/en/

Wanda Hotels launches new midscale brand

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/world/30360716

Wanda Hotels launches new midscale brand

World December 19, 2018 09:00

By The Nation

2,136 Viewed

Wanda Hotels & Resorts recently launched its new midscale brand Wanda Moments as well as the newly upgraded guest loyalty programme – Wanda Club – with a gala dinner at the conference cent43 on the Star Island of Qingdao Movie Metropolis.

The conference brought together representatives of Wanda Club members, guests of Wanda Moments and media guests to witness the launch of Wanda Moments and the new development strategy of Wanda Hotels & Resorts.

Dr Ning Qifeng, executive president of Wanda Cultural Tourism Creativity and president of Wanda Hotels & Resorts, introduced the group’s latest development strategy during its transformation to assetlight development and Wanda Moments, the new premium midend hotel brand. He announced that Wanda Moments plans to develop 700 hotels around China in the next 5 years, and shared the comprehensive upgrade of Wanda Club programme with the guests.

As the fifth hotel brand of Wanda Hotels & Resorts after Wanda Reign, Wanda Vista, Wanda Realm and Wanda Jin, Wanda Moments is a midscale hotel brand committed to providing highquality selected service to business travellers. It continues the diversity and inclusivity of Wanda hotel brands, and the artistic design, attentive services as well as interactive staying experience.  With the brand concept of “Better for tomorrow” and the 4S core values (sweet, social, style, smart), Wanda Moments aims to create a new lifestyle that integrates art, culture, intelligence and fashion.

Liu Yingwu, vice president of Wanda Hotels & Resorts and president of Wanda Hotel Design Institute, introduced Wanda’s integrated services from hotel design to construction and to project management. “The assetlight transformation we are pursuing is not just providing hotel management and design services, but a integrated project management services. It is an innovative service model and a mature and completed management system that based on the investment, construction and operation experience of more than 100 hotels. This enables us to assist and serve our owners with extensive ownership experience and systems.”

An easy way to get to Barcelona

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/world/30360714

An easy way to get to Barcelona

World December 19, 2018 09:00

By The Nation

2,313 Viewed

Etihad Airways offers a new option for travellers with a new flight between Abu Dhabi and Barcelona.

A twoclass Airbus A330200 operates this new route five times a week before becoming a daily flight from March 31.

“We have been tremendously excited about the launch of this service and what better time to arrive here than the month Etihad celebrates its 15th anniversary. Commercial and cultural links between the UAE and the Catalonia region are flourishing and Etihad is honoured to play a pivotal role in facilitating and enhancing the growth of trade and the strong demand for tourism,” said Tony Douglas, group chief executive officer Etihad Aviation Group.

“This is a breathtakingly beautiful part of the world, with something to offer the most discerning of travellers, and now for the first time, Abu Dhabi is accessible from Barcelona with regular nonstop flights, featuring Etihad’s acclaimed inflight hospitality.

The Abu DhabiBarcelonaAbu Dhabi flights are available on Monday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Etihad Airways operates an extensive codeshare partnership with Air Europa (UX) allowing guests a seamless transfer with the Spanish airline’s services between Barcelona and Madrid.

Etihad also codeshares with Air Europa beyond Madrid to 19 cities in Europe, South America, Mexico and the Caribbean. The number of visitors from the UAE to Spain has been rising rapidly thanks to a successful Schengen visa waiver programme introduced for UAE nationals in 2015.

Barcelona is the second city in Spain served by Etihad Airways, complementing the airline’s existing daily service to Madrid. The new link will provide business and leisure travellers with convenient timings to travel between Abu Dhabi and Barcelona, also providing seamless onward connections through Abu Dhabi to major cities in the Indian Subcontinent, Southeast Asia, China, Japan, and Australia.

Find out more at http://www.Etihad.com.

The long arm of the law

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/thailand/30360822

  • A mural of two koi fish swimming by Danish urban contemporary artist Christian Storm
  • PMQ, one of the biggest conservation projects in recent Hong Kong history, has been transformed into a creative hub.
  • PMQ offers “Hong Kong on Steps”.
  • Pomch was established by designers Jeffrey L and Felix T, graduates of the School of Design, Hong Kong Polytechnic University.
  • Glue Associates is a platform that promotes a selection of international designer products and shares the stories behind their creations.
  • Vivienne Tam is an international fashion designer renowned for her culture-bridging, East-meets-West approach to design.
  • Garden Meow is a cat-themed restaurant.
  • Tea products are among others at Goods of Desire.

The long arm of the law

Thailand December 21, 2018 01:00

By Kitchana Lersakvanitchakul
THE NATION

Hong Kong turns its former Police Married Quarters into a fashionable art hub

A popular destination with Thais, Hong Kong has a well-deserved reputation as a shopping mecca. But it’s also a great place to discover art, design and culture and the best way of doing this is by taking a stroll through Old Town Central towards the historic site-turned-creative hub PMQ.

 

Old Town Central brings together unique tourism hotspots in both Central and Sheung Wan districts and the Hong Kong Tourism Board has designed five themed walking tours – “Tasting Hong Kong”, “Time Traveller”, “Crazy for Art”, “Treasure Hunt” and “Something for Everyone” – to offer visitors endless avenues as they experience the vast and vibrant Central district. The attractions include but are not limited to colonial monuments, temples, art galleries, antique stores, street art displays, popular restaurants, rooftop bars and local delicacies.

 

I choose to set out on Hollywood Road, one of the first roads built in the city and home to a canvas of graffiti and street art, most of it tucked away in the streets and alleys that intersect the road.

The first piece of street art that I come across is Alex Croft’s colourful mural of old townhouses on Graham Street, which is very popular on social media. Next up are Danish urban contemporary artist Christian Storm’s eye-catching mural of two koi swimming on a wall on Shing Wong Street, which combines his trademark geometric elements with Chinese culture, and Japanese artist Shingo Katori’s “Large Mouth Dragon Boy” on Shelley Street, his first artwork accessible to the public outside Japan. Wanting to bring good fortune to Hong Kong and visitors from around the world, he decided on a lively colourful dragon, a powerful symbol in feng shui.

 

I’m so engrossed in admiring the street art that I don’t realise how far I have walked until I reach Aberdeen Street from where it’s an uphill trek to PMQ, one of the biggest conservation projects in recent Hong Kong history.

“The revitalisation project has kept something of the original,” says Chuek Yiu Wong, senior executive of corporate communication and tourism marketing at PMQ Management and also my guide.

 

Before it was revitalised into a centre for all things creative and design-based, the PMQ was known as the former Police Married Quarters. It housed the very first dormitory open to junior Chinese police officers from 1951 to 2000, as well as the Central School, the first government school to provide Western education to the Chinese from 1884 to 1944. Its alumni include the founding father of the Republic of China Sun Yatsen, casino tycoon Stanley Ho, and businessman Lee Hysan.

 

After it was destroyed in World War II, the 6,000-square-metre site was developed as the first dormitory for married Chinese police officers and their families, with two seven-storey buildings housing single and double rooms accessed from an open-air corridor.

Architecturally, the buildings have remained as they were with retaining walls, granite steps, and relics, and with the residential units converted into an eclectic mix of boutiques, studios, and cafes. Interiors remain simple with concrete walls painted white while window frames and railings have been restored to their original teal colour. A newly constructed bridge linking the two parallel buildings over a central courtyard doubles as an indoor event space and rooftop garden.

 

In 2014, the hub was opened with more than 100 retail-studio units and 15 pop-ups of around 40 square metres each, along with a multifunction event space called The Qube. Old residential units have been converted into small boutiques and design studios selling handmade products from jewellery to homeware. Pop-up stores from international designers are also a common occurrence at PMQ and the regular night markets are particularly popular among design enthusiasts.

 

I have lunch at the cat-themed Garden Meow restaurant before wandering around several shops on the ground floor. I stop at Gong Fu Teahouse, which enthusiastically cultivates the Gong Fu tea arts culture and holds regular tea arts workshops. Found Muji prides itself on being the first independent store in Hong Kong to make use of various raw materials and traditional technology to remake discarded items into goods that fit the modern life while sustaining the craftsmanship and value. Sukigi Swim boasts swimwear that has been thoughtfully designed to bring character and femininity to each costume. Kapok, meanwhile, has an authentic yet approachable take on fashion and design.

 

The second floor is home to Harrison Wong with original contemporary apparel and accessories for urban males and KMC Design, which makes unique innovative jade jewellery with an oriental touch. Up another flight of stairs is Bamboa Home, purveyor of green eco-products made of locally harvested bamboo, BlkSheep Empire Footwear, which brings an explosion of colour and textures to shoes, and Waka Artisans showcasing the very best of Japanese culture through hand crafted ceramics.

 

The fourth floor hosts the premises of Vanessa Tao who strives to capture the feeling of life and energy in light and effortless garments, Cilocala offering sneakers and rucksacks, Eravolution, a multidisciplinary design studio for architecture, furniture and homeware. Up on the fifth, I wander into 513 Paint Shop, a boutique offering environmentally safe and green house paints for homes and interiors and look at AaaM, a studio that believes architecture is an network of ideas encapsulating urban conditions, public interests, political agenda, snapshots of technologies and philosophies. I linger at Taste Library and browse briefly through its collection of 3,000 books covering different food cultures from around the globe and finish my tour with Lumio on the sixth floor, which gives people the freedom to experience beautiful lighting.

 

PMQ also offers “Hong Kong on Steps”, an unique art project that brings together local and overseas artists from Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, France and Hong Kong to create stair paintings inspired by the vibrant and diverse Hong Kong landscape.

“PMQ serves as a platform to connect local design talents to both local and international markets. In order to help local talents to continue to grow and flourish, PMQ provides rental discounts and also sponsors the designers to participate in different overseas trade shows and fashion shows, which helps them gain international exposure,” says Chuek Yiu.

“Since our opening in 2014, the designers have been able to continue to make and develop substantial and steady progress.”

IF YOU GO

– To get there, take Exit 1 of MTR Sheung Wan Station, turn right on to Des Voeux Road Central, then right to Gilman’s Bazaar. Go straight towards Queen’s Road Central. Walk along Aberdeen Street for around seven minutes to reach PMQ.

– Or take Exit C from MTR Central Station Exit C and walk along Des Voeux Road to the Hang Seng Bank Headquarters, which is linked to the Central–Mid-Levels Escalator. Take the escalator to Staunton Street and turn right. PMQ is about three minutes on foot.

– For more information, visit http://www.PMQ.org.hk.

Flying? There’s an app for that

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/thailand/30360561

Flying? There’s an app for that

Thailand December 17, 2018 13:29

By The Nation

Thai Airways International (THAI) has launched a new “Thai Airways” mobile application, with a new look that makes the customer travel experience more comfortable and convenient.

The new mobile application increases channels for more customer reach as well as customer service.

“The new developed application under the name ‘Thai Airways’ improves the customer travel experience, making it more convenient for return customers as the new app will save information from previous searches and the passenger’s past travel itineraries. The application makes it easier for customers to make reservations, payments, check-in, and check other information before and after the journey, as well as other THAI promotions and special offers,” says Wiwat Piyawiroj, Executive Vice President, Commercial.

The new mobile application offers new capabilities, such as flight information and travel itinerary, travel reminder, Royal Orchid Plus membership services, E-Boarding Pass within the application, displaying flight details on smart watches that are linked with the application, and other services such as hotel reservation, car rental, and travel insurance.

Passengers who apply for Royal Orchid Plus membership from today onward, then log-in, make flight reservations through the Thai Airways mobile application, and travel with THAI will receive 3,500 miles.

The Thai Airways mobile application may be downloaded through the App Store (iOS operating system) and through Google Play (Android operating system).

Can the reef live on?

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/world/30360424

A dead and eroding section of reef following back-to-back bleaching events.
A dead and eroding section of reef following back-to-back bleaching events.

Can the reef live on?

World December 15, 2018 01:00

By Agence France-Presse
Sydney, Australia

Surviving bleached barrier coral “more resilient to heat”, experts find

CORALS ON Australia’s Great Barrier Reef that survived bleaching from rising sea temperatures were more resistant to another bout of hot conditions the following year, scientists said Tuesday, a “silver lining” for the embattled ecosystem.

The 2,300-kilometre Unesco World Heritage-listed reef off Australia’s northeastern coast was hit by back-to-back bleaching events in 2016 and 2017.

Bleaching occurs when abnormal environmental conditions, such as warmer sea temperatures, cause corals to expel tiny photosynthetic algae, draining them of their colour. Corals can recover if the water temperature drops and the algae are able to recolonise them.

A dead and eroding section of reef following back-to-back bleaching events. 

Swathes of coral died or were damaged in the unprecedented successive events, particularly the more heat-susceptible branching corals that are shaped like tables.

But Professor Terry Hughes of James Cook University, who has been leading the surveys of bleached corals, found in the latest study, published in Nature Climate Change, that the response of the reef was different between the two years.

“We were astonished to find less bleaching in 2017, because the temperatures were even more extreme than the year before,” Hughes said.

The northern part of the reef, which was worst-affected in 2016, bleached “much less” in 2017 even though some of the reefs underwent similar levels of heat stress in both summers.

In the central regions, the levels of bleaching for both years were observed to be the same, even though the heat exposure was higher in 2017, the researchers said.

Meanwhile, in the southern region – the least-affected – corals that suffered minor bleaching in the first year showed no bleaching in the second.

“It looks like the history of their experience in year one has toughened them up so that they’ve acclimatised to moderate levels in year two of heat exposure … It’s something of a silver lining.”

Hughes said it was too early to say whether the reef could be hit by another bleaching event in early 2019, after a spring heatwave in adjacent Queensland state.

Global coral reefs risk catastrophic die-offs if Earth’s average surface temperature increases two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, earlier research has shown.

Coral reefs make up less than one per cent of Earth’s marine environment, but are home to an estimated 25 per cent of ocean life, acting as nurseries for many species of fish.

Disaster in the making

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/world/30360423

  • Nepalese resident Ngawang Tshering Sherpa speaks during an interview with AFP in Shurke village in Solukhumbu district, some 140km northeast of Kathmandu.
  • The Imja glacial lake controlled exit channel in the Everest region of the Solukhumbu district, some 140km northeast of Kathmandu.

Disaster in the making

World December 15, 2018 01:00

By Agence France-Presse

Fighting climate change in the shadow of Mount Everest

FORMED IN the shadow of Mount Everest, the turquoise depths of Nepal’s Imja glacial lake would be a breathtaking miracle of nature to behold – were they not a portent of catastrophic floods.

Scientists warn that as climate change causes Himalayan glaciers to melt at an alarming rate, lakes like Imja could swell further and eventually collapse, triggering a terrifying deluge in Nepal, an impoverished nation at the mercy of a warming planet.

Those tasked with staving off disaster fear a “glacial lake outburst flood” – sending torrents of water, mud and rock hurtling downstream– could reach as far as Nepal’s densely populated southern plains, wiping out roads, vital energy projects and entire villages in its path.

Nepalese resident Ngawang Tshering Sherpa speaks during an interview with AFP in Shurke village in Solukhumbu district, some 140km northeast of Kathmandu.

“The risk is getting bigger,” says Arun Bhakta Shrestha, a climate scientist from the Kathmandu-based International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development.

“These valleys are getting more populated, and infrastructure is developing rapidly.”

Hundreds of these lakes have appeared out of nowhere in the Himalayas in recent decades. A 2014 survey found one quarter of Nepal’s glaciers shrunk between 1977 and 2010, leaving behind 1,466 lakes.

Twenty-one have been identified as potentially dangerous and Nepal is racing to stay a step ahead of disaster, as global warming reshapes its mountain geography.

“As a small country, there is little we can do to stop what is happening to our glaciers,” says Rishi Ram Sharma, the director general at Nepal’s department of hydrology and meteorology.

“But we have to do what we can do to adapt and protect our people.”

Nepal’s fastest-growing lake, Imja once posed little threat to the villagers of Surke, a picturesque hamlet perched high in the Everest region.

In the early 1980s, the small lake at the foot of the Imja glacier at 5,010 metres was unremarkable.

But by 2014, it had more than tripled in size, contained only by a natural wall of debris, known as a moraine, which experts warned might not hold back the waters much longer.

A year later, when a massive earthquake struck Nepal, villagers in Surke assumed Imja had collapsed and would soon bury them all.

“We were terrified the quake would trigger a flood from the lake. All of us ran for safety,” villager Phudoma Sherpa recalls.

The lake miraculously held – sparing the 12,000 people directly in its path.

But the quake served as a wake-up call for policymakers.

Experts told the government that the gigantic glacial lakes were effectively a ticking time bomb.

With thousands of lives at stake, a massive undertaking began in late 2016 to drain Imja, which then measured 150 metres deep and two kilometres long.

Only the second operation of its kind in Nepal’s history, the project was a testament to the monumental challenge posed by glacial lakes, which are often remote and very difficult to access.

The Imja glacial lake controlled exit channel in the Everest region of the Solukhumbu district, some 140km northeast of Kathmandu.

Yaks and helicopters transported materials and teams of workers to the high-altitude region, where they toiled in thin air for six months until a drainage canal and early-warning system were installed.

The lake was lowered by 3.5 metres, draining more than five million cubic metres of water.

“Now, you have a channel. So any water that accumulates is drained out. That is how the risk is lowered,” explains Deepak KC, a climate change analyst from the United Nations Development Programme that backed the project.

The project cost $7.4 million (Bt57.4 million), an expensive commitment for a nation heavily reliant on its wealthier neighbours and on

international aid that contributed 12 per cent to its GDP in the last fiscal year.

In this case, more than 80 per cent of the money came from the Global Environment Facility, an international fund that provides green financing to developing countries. The rest was covered by UNDP.

With a paltry economy and 26 million people, Nepal has a tiny carbon footprint compared to its giant patrons China and India, major polluters that are home to a third of humanity.

Melting glaciers from climate change pose a huge threat to Nepal – as well as an undeserved extortionate burden, authorities say.

“We feel as if we have been penalised for the mistakes we never made,” President Bidya Devi Bhandari told world leaders at a climate summit in Poland this month.

“We are compelled to spend (a) significant amount of our national income in addressing disasters-induced problems.”

Nepal is asking the global community for further assistance to fight climate change.

For those no longer living under Imja’s shadow, the cost is well worth it.

“There was a sense of fear before, but we feel a lot safer now,” Sherpa says.

Bangkok tops Agoda’s 2018 list of Asian destinations

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/thailand/30360181

Bangkok tops Agoda’s 2018 list of Asian destinations

Thailand December 11, 2018 13:17

By The Nation

Online travel agent Agoda has found Bangkok to be the most popular Asian destination of 2018, “not only a convenient transit point to explore the rest of Thailand, but also teeming with energy, quirks and fascinating culture”.

 According to the year’s booking data from Agoda, beachside city Pattaya has been the 10th most popular Asian destination.

Tokyo is No 2, followed in descending order by Hong Kong, Osaka, Taipei, Seoul, Singapore and Bali, and then Pattaya.

Thailand ranked second-most-booked Asian country this year. “From historic temples and sparkling white sandy beaches to rich culture and world-famous cuisine, it’s no wonder why Thailand continues to draw in travellers from around the world,” Agoda says.

 Japan has claimed the crown for top Asian country overall, the credit going to “ephemeral sights like cherry blossoms to the endless quirky, wonderful experiences such as robot cafes”. Malaysia ranks third.

Thai travellers have mainly enjoyed domestic trips in 2018, with Japan and Singapore the most popular countries further afield.

Agoda says Bangkok, Pattaya, Chiang Mai, Hua Hin and Phuket have been the top five destinations in Thailand for Thais, followed by “laid-back destinations” Khao Yai, Chonburi, Krabi and Chiang Rai.

Tokyo appeals to Thais because it has no visa requirements, additional flight routes and diverse cultural highlights.

Miss Thailand runner-up in Miss World contest

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/thailand/30360085

Miss World 2018 finalists, from left, Miss Belarus Maria Vasilevich, Miss Jamaica Kadijah Robinson, Miss Mexico Vanessa Ponce de Leon, Miss Uganda Quiin Abenakyo and Miss Thailand Nicolene Pichapa Limsnukan stand on stage.// AFP PHOTO
Miss World 2018 finalists, from left, Miss Belarus Maria Vasilevich, Miss Jamaica Kadijah Robinson, Miss Mexico Vanessa Ponce de Leon, Miss Uganda Quiin Abenakyo and Miss Thailand Nicolene Pichapa Limsnukan stand on stage.// AFP PHOTO

Miss Thailand runner-up in Miss World contest

Thailand December 09, 2018 19:47

By The Thaiger

2,482 Viewed

Thailand was pipped at the post for this year’s Miss World crown, with Miss Thailand Nicolene Pichapa Limsnukan settling for runner-up to 26-year-old Vanessa Ponce de Leon of Mexico.

Miss Mexico Vanessa Ponce de Leon (C) reacts after winning the 68th Miss World contest final, with runner-up Miss Thailand Nicolene Pichapa Limsnukan (L), Miss Belarus Maria Vasilevich (2L), Miss Jamaica Kadijah Robinson (3R), Miss Panama Solaris Barba (2R) and Miss Uganda Quiin Abenakyo (R) in Sanya on the tropical Chinese island of Hainan on December 8, 2018. // AFP PHOTO

De Leon was crowned the 68th Miss World at the culmination of the pageant held in the Chinese coastal resort of Sanya.

For added entertainment, American disco queens Sister Sledge, performing their 1979 anthem “We Are Family”.

Miss Thailand Nicolene Pichapa Limsnukan (C) reacts as she is announced the runner up in the 68th Miss World final, as Miss World 2017 Manushi Chhillar (L) looks on in Sanya, on the tropical Chinese island of Hainan on December 8, 2018. // AFP PHOTO

Nicolene, crowed Miss Thailand World in Bangkok on September 15, was born in California and raised by a single mum.

The 20-year-old, who studies business at the University of the Thai Chamber of Commerce, also finished in the Top 10 at the Miss Thailand Universe pageant in June.

She has been a regular at beauty competitions since she was six. In 2014, at age 15, she won the Miss Teen Asia USA title.

Thailand never has won a Miss World title.

Miss Mexico Vanessa Ponce de Leon (L) reacts after being announced the winner of the 68th Miss World final, with runner-up Miss Thailand Nicolene Pichapa Limsnukan (R) in Sanya, on the tropical Chinese island of Hainan on December 8, 2018. // AFP PHOTO

It is the eighth time the Miss World final has been held in Sanya, capital of the island province of Hainan, which first hosted the pageant in 2003.

At the finals three years ago, controversy erupted as officials in Hong Kong stopped Miss Canada, Anastasia Lin, from boarding a plane bound for Sanya, telling her she would not receive a visa.

The 25-year old actress claimed the decision was due to her stance on China’s rights record, including its persecution of Falun Gong, a spiritual group of which she is a member.

Miss World 2018 finalists, from left, Miss Belarus Maria Vasilevich, Miss Jamaica Kadijah Robinson, Miss Mexico Vanessa Ponce de Leon, Miss Uganda Quiin Abenakyo and Miss Thailand Nicolene Pichapa Limsnukan stand on stage  during the 68th Miss World contest final, in Sanya on the tropical Chinese island of Hainan on December 8, 2018. – Miss Mexico Vanessa Ponce de Leon went on to be crowned Miss World 2018. // AFP PHOTO

PHOTOS: In the city of Angels…

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/thailand/30360007

PHOTOS: In the city of Angels…

Thailand December 08, 2018 10:00

By The Nation

2,111 Viewed

Women from 95 countries will participate in the 67th Miss Universe beauty pageant, which will be held in Bangkok on December 17.

Photo by…Rachanon Intharagsa, Tanachai Pramarnpanich, EPA-EFE and Miss Universe organization

See more Photos: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/gallery/album/241