In the heart of Cambodia’s southern highlands, Bokor Hill Station rises above the clouds — a surreal blend of French nostalgia, jungle mystique, and ruinous charm where history, ghosts, and sea breezes mingle in the mist.

A mountain where time and mist play tricks
Few places in Cambodia feel like walking inside a memory quite like Bokor Hill Station (ភ្នំបូកគោ). Perched 1,000 meters above sea level in the Elephant Mountains, this twice-abandoned French resort town once stood as a mountain retreat for colonial officials seeking relief from the steamy plains below. Today, it’s a hauntingly photogenic mix of moss-covered ruins, cinematic fog, and unexpected modern developments.
For travelers drawn to history, atmosphere, and a hint of the supernatural, Bokor is irresistible. It tells a story that’s part ghost town, part heritage site, and part eco-tourist daydream, all just a two-hour drive from Kampot or roughly three hours from Phnom Penh.
From tropical sweat to mountain chill
Bokor Hill Station was born in the 1920s, when French colonials decided that Indochina needed its own version of the cool hill retreats, they so enjoyed in India and Vietnam. Engineers and thousands of Cambodian laborers carved a serpentine road through dense rainforest to the summit. The project was backbreaking — many died in the process — but the French achieved their alpine dream: a miniature world of stone villas, a post office, a church, and the now-iconic Bokor Palace Hotel.

Decades later, the mist-shrouded desolation of Bokor would find its way into literature. Marguerite Duras, who spent part of her youth in colonial Indochina, immortalized similar landscapes of melancholy and longing in her novel Un barrage contre le Pacifique (The Sea Wall). Though set on the Cambodian coast rather than the highlands, its atmosphere of tropical disillusion and crumbling dreams feels as if it might just as well drift through the mists of Bokor Hill
The Bokor Palace Hotel, completed in 1925, glowed with opulence in its day. It offered champagne, dancing, and a breezy view over the Gulf of Thailand. One almost imagines gramophones playing while officers in white linen admired the sunset through cigarette smoke. Alas, the idyll was brief.
During Cambodia’s turbulent mid-20th century, Bokor was abandoned several times. It was first abandoned by the French during WWII. The Khmer Rouge occupied it in the 1970s, and for years, the mountaintop was off limits. Nature reclaimed the buildings, wrapping vines around balconies and staining the walls with copper-red lichen. The Old Catholic Church, built of weathered stone, became a symbol of both endurance and melancholy — its silhouette a favorite among photographers who relish fog-draped scenes.

Local lore insists Bokor’s ghosts — colonial officers, brides, and soldiers — all roam freely when the mist thickens. Whether or not you believe it, eeriness suits the place.
Bokor today: where old and new collide
Reaching Bokor these days no longer requires heroic effort. A well-paved road meanders up from Kampot, slicing through Preah Monivong National Park. Visitors can stop at scenic lookouts or waterfalls like Popokvil, whose cool spray is especially welcome after the climbs and curves.
The drive itself is half the attraction — on a clear day, the view from the top reveals an oceanic panorama stretching toward Kep and the Vietnamese island of Phu Quoc. On a misty day (which is most days), the entire world seems to disappear into vapor.
In the 2010s, modern developers led by Sokha Group transformed parts of Bokor into a resort complex, complete with a large casino hotel — the Thansur Sokha — and street lighting that gives the summit an oddly metropolitan feel by night. Opinions diverge: some lament that the old Bokor’s melancholic solitude is gone, while others welcome the comfort of a hot shower and warm bowl of noodle soup a few meters from the haunted church.
Still, the heart of the hill station remains largely untouched. Walk beyond the now-renovated Bokor Palace and you still find an unexpected hush: moss underfoot, wind in your ears, and a faint scent of pine. From that edge, the jungle rolls away into the haze, as if quietly retelling the stories the French left behind.

What to see and do on Bokor Hill
Start with the remains of the colonial village: the post office, and the church. Each building has its own mood and photographic angle. The post office, with its arched entrance, feels frozen mid-sentence; the church, stoic and serene, offers a hilltop view perfect at sunset.
A short drive from the summit, this multi-tiered cascade tumbles through mossy rocks during the rainy season (June–October). Bring sandals — it’s slippery but worth it. The falls’ name allegedly means “swirling clouds,” an apt metaphor for Bokor’s trademark mist.
Guarding the road to the summit, a giant statue of Lok Yeay Mao, a mythical grandmother spirit revered by Cambodian travelers, watches over Bokor. Locals leave offerings for safe passage and good fortune. It’s a vivid reminder that Cambodian spirituality coexists easily with colonial relics and modernization.
The view from the cliff’s edge
Behind the old Bokor Palace, a dramatic drop plunges toward the Cambodian coast. On a clear morning, this is perhaps the most staggering view in the south of the country: the ceramic-blue expanse of the Gulf, flecked with fishing boats. Don’t approach too closely — the safety rails are motivated more by poetry than by engineering.
- Getting there: Most visitors depart from Kampot, where tours and motorbike rentals are widely available. The road is smooth, but for scooters under 125cc, the climb can be slow.
- When to go: Dry season (November–April) offers the clearest views, though the fog contributes much to the mystique. Early morning or late afternoon are enchanting times.
- What to bring: A light jacket, camera, snacks, and patience for the fickle weather. The temperature at the top can drop below 20°C — a shock for anyone accustomed to Cambodia’s heat.
- Entry: The road and park may charge an entrance fee, typically a few dollars per person.
And yes — ghost sighting fees remain complimentary.
The timeless seduction of ruined ambition
Bokor Hill Station is not merely a sightseeing stop. It’s a meditation on time, empire, and the curious human habit of building grand dreams in improbable places. Like an old novel left open at the climax, it refuses to conclude neatly: partly reclaimed, partly reborn, forever caught between past and present.
Come with a sense of wonder and a respect for silence — you’ll find the mountain still speaks.
Sources & further reading / To know more
- Documentation Center of Cambodia – Historical resources on French colonial-era projects and Cambodian labor history.
- Kampot Tourist Information Center – Up-to-date details on visiting hours, road conditions, and local transport.
- Cambodia tourism board: Bokor heritage trail – Overview of cultural and natural highlights within the national park.
- Photographic essays on old Bokor Hill Station – Visual explorations of the site’s haunting atmosphere and restoration efforts.
More than a destination, Bokor Hill Station stands as a metaphor for Cambodia’s layered history — colonial splendor weathered by war, reclaimed by nature, and now cautiously revived. Between fog and memory, the mountain continues its silent dialogue with all who climb it.
Pascal Médeville is a writer and digital publisher based in Cambodia. He explores the intersections of culture, history, and travel across Southeast Asia. His work often focuses on places where memory lingers — like temples, kitchens, and forgotten mountain towns.

















