I've been cruising around Thailand on my bike for a while now, and man, I've seen some wild stuff when it comes to new builds popping up everywhere. Back in the day, I dabbled in real estate and construction, so my brain automatically kicks into gear—crunching numbers on costs, potential returns, all that jazz. Most spots make sense, but every so often, I spot these projects that just scream "what the hell were they thinking?" Like, prime examples of building in the wrong place at the wrong time.
Take this one spot I came across recently. Two years ago, it was just an empty strip of land along a quiet side road—long and narrow, nothing special. Fast forward to now, and bam: a couple dozen identical houses crammed in there. No breathing room at all. Each house swallows up the entire plot; forget about a little garden or backyard. The beach? Miles away. And right next door is this massive, noisy main street that turns into a parking lot during rush hour. When that happens, drivers detour right through this little neighborhood, turning it into absolute chaos—horns blaring, exhaust fumes everywhere. Not exactly the dream spot for a chill home life.
I poked around inside one of these places (they're fresh on the rental market), and honestly? It's basic as hell. Cheap finishes, awkward layouts, and already showing wear and tear—like leaky faucets and wonky wiring that screams corner-cutting. Cozy? Not even close. But get this: the rent they're asking is insane. We're talking prices that'd be steep even for beachfront property. A year after construction wrapped, and most are still empty. Shocker, right? Who'd pay that much for a noisy box in the middle of nowhere?
That got me wondering: what was the investor smoking when they dumped cash into this? If they've got the dough to build 20 houses, they're no idiot. But crunch the numbers, and it's clear—this ain't about flipping for profit or steady rental income. Location kills any chance of that. Turns out, the owner is Chinese, and suddenly, it all clicked.
Look, I'm no expert in finance or economics, but I've got a gut feeling these houses are a front for laundering dirty money. Thailand's real estate scene is ripe for it—especially with all the foreign cash flowing in. From what I've read and heard, places like Phuket, Bangkok, and Pattaya are hotspots for this crap. Criminals (think drug syndicates or cyber scammers) buy up properties with illicit funds, making it look legit. In 2022, Thai authorities busted a network laundering over a billion bucks through high-end spots in those areas. And just last year, the Anti-Money Laundering Office (AMLO) seized assets worth hundreds of millions from global crime rings using real estate as a wash cycle.
So, how does it work with these houses? High-level stuff: First, they "place" the dirty cash by buying land or building outright—often through shell companies or nominees to hide who's really behind it. Then comes "layering"—renting them out (even if barely anyone bites) or flipping them later to create a paper trail of "clean" transactions. Finally, "integration": the money from sales or rents gets funneled back as legitimate income. In Thailand, weak checks on big cash deals and porous borders make it easy for folks from places like China to park shady funds here. Red flags? Overpriced builds in crap locations, empty units, and foreign owners who vanish. Authorities are cracking down—new due diligence rules for agents and developers, plus freezing assets tied to crimes—but it's still a mess.
I'm 100% convinced that's the play here. Why else build a money pit like this? If you're in Thailand eyeing property, keep your eyes peeled—don't get tangled in someone else's laundry. What's your take? Seen anything similar?
I write my texts myself, correct mistakes and translate via ChatGPT (which is not a violation on Hive)!
All photos were taken by me personally - I am a beginner photographer, so I ask professionals not to judge strictly.
Thank you for sharing these moments with me! Until new stories and new holidays! ✌️.
Camera 📷: Sony Alpha 7 IV full-frame
Lens 🔭: Sony FE 70-200mm F: 2.8 GM OSS II
Lens 🔭: Sony FE 90mm F2.8 Macro G OSS
Lens 🔭: Sony FE 20-70 mm F: 4 G
Processed 🛠: Lightroom
photo by openai