11 OCTOBER 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An alley in the Saphan Han market. Many shops in the market are already closed. Street vendors and illegal market vendors in the Saphan Han and Saphan Lek area will be removed in the next two weeks as a part of an urban renewal project coordinated by the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration. About 500 vendors along Damrongsathit Bridge, popularly known as Saphan Lek, have until Monday, October 11, to relocate. Vendors who don't move will be evicted. Saphan Lek is one of several markets and street vending areas being closed in Bangkok this year. The market is known for toy and replica guns, bootleg and pirated DVDs and CDs and electronic toys. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ OCTOBER 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A man who had a coffee stand in the Saphan Han market looks at what's left of his shop after he closed it ahead of the deadline for shops to be out of Saphan Han. Many shops in the Saphan Han and Saphan Lek markets are already closed. Street vendors and illegal market vendors in the Saphan Lek area will be removed in the next two weeks as a part of an urban renewal project coordinated by the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration. About 500 vendors along Damrongsathit Bridge, popularly known as Saphan Lek, have until Monday, October 11, to relocate. Vendors who don't move will be evicted. Saphan Lek is one of several markets and street vending areas being closed in Bangkok this year. The market is known for toy and replica guns, bootleg and pirated DVDs and CDs and electronic toys. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ