In the fast-developing coastal corridor of Krabi, beachfront land with vision is becoming a rare commodity. Regalia’s 11-rai plot in Ao Nam Mao is one of the few remaining opportunities where a project can start smart — and scale with intent. With direct beach access and natural elevation, the site offers both beauty and flexibility.
Developed in collaboration with Asst. Prof. Dr. Khiensak Seangklieng, the first phase of this project will introduce elegantly designed modular units — fully operational hotel suites that can be installed quickly and dismantled easily. These units serve as a low-impact, income-generating start to the land’s lifecycle, activating the beachfront while allowing room for future transformation.
When the time is right, the property will shift from short-term hospitality into its long-term form: individually owned, ultra-private villas with land title — making it one of the most strategic hybrid development plays in the region.
11-rai beachfront land in high-growth Ao Nam Mao corridor
Initial phase features modular, relocatable hotel units for early ROI
Designed in partnership with Asst. Prof. Dr. Khiensak Seangklieng
Long-term vision: saleable luxury villas with land ownership
50–70% more environmentally efficient than traditional Thai developments
Projected completion: September 2026
Most beachfront plots in Thailand are overbuilt from day one. Regalia’s approach is different. By using flexible architecture in the early phase, the land retains agility — able to shift toward higher-value development once pricing, demand, and brand positioning align.
This phasing model also means early investors can benefit from income generation during the hotel phase, then transition into land-backed villa sales with title — a structure rarely executed with such clarity on Thailand’s coastlines.
Beyond flexibility, this project also delivers on sustainability. Construction methods and materials are chosen for environmental efficiency, with 50–70% less impact than standard developments. Energy systems, water use, and waste infrastructure are all built around long-term resilience — essential in a region increasingly sensitive to ecological strain.
Ao Nam Mao is no longer overlooked. It’s quickly becoming Krabi’s next high-end zone, with major Thai developers like Central Group already securing land. Yet it still offers pockets of opportunity for independent brands to enter early — not with volume, but with character. Regalia’s concept here isn’t about mass. It’s about setting a tone — one that balances early-stage access with a long runway for growth.