The area surrounding the mountain is full of heavy clusters of grasses, shrubs, and trees including teak, acacia, Siamese rosewood, black rosewood, and various fruit trees such as Indian gooseberry, black plum, and ramontchi. The lush green surroundings seen in the 2020s go back to the development of the Siri Charoenwat Forest Plantation Project in 1990, named after Queen Sirikit, which was initiated by His Majesty King Bhumibol Adulyadej in 1992 on the occasion of Sirikit's 60th birthday.[4]
The Buddha Mountain is a popular place for leisure activities, mediation, celebrations, and dance performances.[6][7] As of 2016, Thai, Chinese and Russian tourists made up the majority of visitors to the area.[8] According to the Forest Training Department, around 1,000 monkeys were living around the mountain in 2015.[9]
King Bhumibol ordered the drawing of an outline of the Buddha with advanced equipment, and the completion of the project under the supervision of Crown PrinceMaha Vajiralongkorn.[12] After the face of the mountain was flattened, teams from the Phra Chomklao Technology Institute in Thonburi used laser technology in January 1996 to penetrate the limestone. They cut the outline of a Buddha image, that would become the largest line-edged Buddha image in the world and a permanent religious representation of Thailand.[13] The Buddha image was later inlaid with gold leaf, blessing the mountain with permanent status as a sacred site.[14] The guided laser technology used was the first of its kind, introduced to carve the image of Lord Buddha.[15]