The Royal Capital

My only visits to Luang Prabang were during my time with VSO only when I helped service to Lao National Radio there. We were privileged to receive invitations to royal events as we were considered not only foreign aid personnel, but also working under the Ministry of Information.

Royal Palace in Luang Prabang 1969

In 1969–1970, Luang Prabang remained the ceremonial heart of the kingdom under King Savang Vatthana. The town moved at a monastic rhythm: temple drums marking the hours, novices sweeping courtyards at dawn, and the Mekong drifting past as it had for centuries. Despite the wider conflict in the country, Luang Prabang preserved an atmosphere of calm formality — a place where court protocol, Buddhist ritual, and traditional Lao culture continued with remarkable continuity. The royal palace stood at the centre of this world, symbolizing a monarchy balancing modern diplomacy with deep cultural roots.

SECTION 2 Luang Prabang 1969-1970

The Lao National Radio station that once stood on Sisavangvong Road, directly beneath Phou Si and opposite the Royal Palace, did not survive the political and urban transformations that followed 1975. After the establishment of the Lao PDR, national broadcasting was fully centralised in Vientiane, and the Luang Prabang facility was downgraded to a provincial relay. During the 1990s, as part of the UNESCO World Heritage redevelopment of the historic centre, the non‑heritage radio buildings were removed to restore the ceremonial streetscape around the former Royal Palace. Nothing of the original station remains today; its former site has been absorbed into the modern fabric of shops and guesthouses, leaving only memories and photographs to mark its brief but culturally significant role in the late Royal Lao period