Wat Phra Yai stands on Pratamnak Hill between Pattaya and Jomtien, home to one of the most recognisable landmarks on the eastern Gulf coast — a large seated Buddha image 18 metres tall that can be seen from the sea and from much of central Pattaya. The image, finished in gold mosaic, sits in the open air on the hilltop, visible for kilometres in every direction and serving as a navigational landmark for boats approaching the coast.
The temple was established in 1940 and the main Buddha image added in subsequent decades as the surrounding area developed from a quiet fishing coast into one of Thailand's most visited resort destinations. The contrast between the sacred hilltop and the resort city spreading below it gives Wat Phra Yai a particular character — a place of genuine religious significance that has absorbed millions of visitors without losing its function as an active place of worship.
The approach to the temple passes through a market selling religious items, amulets and tourist souvenirs — a commercial zone that is itself a long-standing part of Thai temple culture, where the boundary between religious commerce and secular trade has always been permeable. The hilltop itself is quieter, with gardens, smaller shrines and views across Pattaya Bay that explain why this site was chosen for a major religious monument.
The temple is particularly busy on Buddhist holidays when Thai worshippers from across Chonburi province come to make merit at the image. At these times the contrast with the resort city below — where an entirely different kind of activity is underway — creates one of the more striking juxtapositions in Thai religious and social geography.
"18 metres of gold mosaic on a hilltop above one of Thailand's most unlikely cities — visible from the sea, impossible to ignore"
Historical Note
Pratamnak Hill where Wat Phra Yai stands has been a significant site since the reign of King Rama V, who built a royal residence here during his visits to the eastern Gulf coast. The hill's association with both royal presence and religious significance predates the development of Pattaya as a resort destination by many decades, giving the temple a historical context that the city surrounding it largely lacks.