I recommend Chatuchak park for anyone who likes picnic or jogging, it's a really nice location. And regarding remote workers, I have a feeling that they will eventually start trying to collect the tax in addition to "just be happy that we're spending money here", from all who live permanently or majority of the time, using proper long stay visas (like marriage, retirement, Elite).
Because they introduced the LTR recently with a flat tax (I think it is 18% or 25%?) for remote workers of big companies (the "must work for a public company or company with 150m$+ revenue" is probably so people won't abuse︀ the visa by paying themselves 200$/month in some abroad entity). It means they're interested to︁ "legalize" and tax the actual remote full-time folks, since it's a new trend after COVID︂ in many companies and countries, to work from home. The "digital nomads" of pre-covid era︃ (blogging, Fiverr/Upwork, etc') were too small of a fish to go after, in order to︄ tax, because their average income multiplied by number of people (on tourist/study visas) was not︅ a lucrative goal to go after, enforcing taxation and proper other visa usages, so it︆ was not a priority (the Chiang Mai co-working space incident is probably the most 'official'︇ statement we can get, from authorities, that they officially didn't care if tourists do some︈ stuff on their laptops while in Thailand, it wasn't considered "working in Thailand" so all︉ people were released and had no trouble like getting their tourist/other visas revoked etc', as︊ far as I understand?). But possibly, with a bigger fish, who are very "tax compliant"︋ residents of US, EU, and have high salaries, the authorities might start moving in the︌ direction of trying to enforce taxation for such workers. Won't be easy, and I have︍ no idea if they'll prefer to let such workers simply "reside and spend" by letting︎ them use whatever existing visas fit them, or will try to collect more $ by️ implementing clear definitions of "remote work/income" in those laws. They'll have to somehow demand from tourists/students to show income proofs, plus explanation when the income/funds were earned. It's kinda weird and can hurt tourism, but the LTR visa still rings a bell to me. Maybe they'll try to watch closer for all transactions into Thai bank accounts? But in this case, what about cash ATM withdrawals using US/EU cards, will they monitor these and somehow try to prove that "John Smith" at the ATM was exactly this specific John who didn't pay the remittance tax, while earning those funds in the same year.
Ok so︀ now while writing this message I realized they'll probably never go to these lengths with︁ attempts to enforce taxation of remote workers, unless the expected returns will be massive, and︂ risking the tourism/arrivals of all these remote workers, won't be an issue for them (it'll︃ happen only in case Thailand will be exclusive destination and all other nearby competing countries︄ will not have long stay visa options at all, but now they have, AFAIK). Hard︅ to say which direction it'll go, but as I understand, at the moment Thai authorities︆ don't care about "laptop work" and don't consider it as "work inside Thailand", but this︇ can change anytime and we should watch it carefully to remain compliant. While there's no︈ specific definition about what "work in Thailand" is, everyone interprets it as he wants, some︉ legal advisers say "yes it is work" others say "it is not" (I've read about︊ it on a few blogs and also reached out myself to a few - in︋ my case the legal folks said "yes, it is work, you cannot do it on︌ tourist/student visas" so possibly things already start changing? or they're just afraid from being caught︍ giving a "gray" advice and decide to remain on a safe side). But at the︎ same time, a gig economy "remote worker" freelancer, cannot get a proper visa, while big️ company employees can (I am not confusing things, right? the LTR visa is not only for people to be employed by a Thai company, but also Amazon/Google/etc' any large corporation from any country?) so their only options are to keep freelancing while tourists, doing visa runs etc'. It's complicated, and I really hope there will be clear regulation soon. Because small startup employees can't use the LTR. Luckily for myself I'm getting married soon, and it gives me proper legal status (I'll get a work permit and a tax ID, I also really need this tax ID for my US LLC tax papers ASAP, the︀ IRS requires foreign owners to file W8-BEN and it has mandatory "foreign ITIN" tax ID︁ in it, no idea why they need it, but whatever, failure to file foreign ownership︂ forms for US LLC is 25k$ penalty, etc'etc'etc')
Not legal advice! Always consult with local︃ advisers who are up to date with latest regulations, yada yada yada! (jk, main reason︄ to always get consultation is of course because each of us is a unique case,︅ different citizenships, different income levels, different goals, and so on).