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World's most-loved landmarks ranked

<p dir="ltr">A new study has ranked the world's most-loved landmarks, whittling down a list of 125 iconic spots down to just ten.</p> <p dir="ltr">Travel experts at <a href="https://usebounce.com/blog/best-loved-landmarks" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Bounce</a> analysed Google search data with a focus on several factors, including annual visitor numbers, TripAdvisor ratings and posts on social media. </p> <p dir="ltr">The US and Canada dominated the list, with Niagara Falls, the Grand Canyon, Golden Gate Bridge and the Statue of Liberty coming in first, third, fourth and fifth respectively. </p> <p dir="ltr">India's Taj Mahal came in second, while the Great Wall of China just missed out on the top five. </p> <p dir="ltr">Though Australia and New Zealand's icons were noticeably absent from the list, the famed Sydney Opera House took out second in Bounce's ranking of landmarks expected to generate the most revenue, coming in behind India's Burj Khalifa.</p> <p dir="ltr">The full list of the top ten most-loved landmarks is:</p> <p dir="ltr">1. Niagara Falls, Canada </p> <p dir="ltr">2. Taj Mahal, India </p> <p dir="ltr">3. Grand Canyon, United States </p> <p dir="ltr">4. Golden Gate Bridge, United States </p> <p dir="ltr">5. Statue Of Liberty, United States </p> <p dir="ltr">6. Great Wall Of China, China</p> <p dir="ltr">7. Eiffel Tower, France</p> <p dir="ltr">8. Burj Khalifa, India</p> <p dir="ltr">9. Banff National Park, Canada</p> <p dir="ltr">10. Colosseum, Italy</p> <p><span id="docs-internal-guid-a8e96ede-7fff-f0d0-7a86-4e6177dfc7c8"></span></p> <p dir="ltr"><em>Image: Getty Images</em></p>

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How many of these famous landmarks have you ticked off?

<p>Incredible feats of architecture can be found on every continent. One of the joys of travelling is finally standing at the foot of that famous tower or wandering through the ruins of an ancient site you’d seen on the history channel. These incredible locations will make you want to pack your bags and book a flight ASAP. Feast your eyes on the world’s most famous landmarks.</p> <p><strong>Statue of Liberty</strong></p> <p><strong>Where is it? </strong>New York CIty, NY, USA <strong>When was it built?</strong> 1875 <strong>Crunch the numbers: </strong>93 metres tall, weighing a total of 225 tonnes. <strong>Fun fact: </strong>On a windy day, the Statue of Liberty can sway as much as 6 inches.</p> <p><strong>Eiffel Tower</strong></p> <p><strong>Where is it? </strong>Paris, France <strong>When was it built?</strong> 1875 <strong>Crunch the numbers: </strong>324 metres tall, weighing a total of 7.3 million kilograms. <strong>Fun fact: </strong>The Eiffel Tower was never intended to be permanent. It was due to be demolished in 1909 but was repurposed as a radio antenna.</p> <p><strong>Big Ben</strong></p> <p><strong>Where is it? </strong>London, England <strong>When was it built?</strong> 1884 <strong>Crunch the numbers: </strong>The clock tower stands at 96 metres tall. The Great Bell inside weighs more than 13 tonnes. <strong>Fun fact:</strong> Many people refer to Big Ben as the tower that houses London’s most recognisable clock, however, Big Ben was actually the name given to the Great Bell inside.</p> <p><strong>Leaning Tower of Pisa</strong></p> <p><strong>Where is it? </strong>Pisa, Italy (85km west of Florence) <strong>When was it built?</strong> 1173 <strong>Crunch the numbers: </strong>57 metres tall, weighing around 12,500 tonnes with a current lean of 3.99 degrees. This means the top of the tower is displaced 3.9 metres from where it would be if it were perfectly vertical. <strong>Fun fact: </strong>The Leaning Tower of Pisa is actually starting to straighten. It has moved 3 inches in the last decade. Experts predict the tower will stand for at least another 200 years.</p> <p><strong>Colosseum</strong></p> <p><strong>Where is it? </strong>Rome, Italy <strong>When was it built?</strong> Construction began in AD 72 and was finished in AD 80 <strong>Crunch the numbers: </strong>189 metres long, 156 metres wide and 48 metres high. It can purportedly hold up to 80,000 spectators. <strong>Fun fact: </strong>Even though Ridley Scott was granted access to film his hit movie, Gladiator, at the Colosseum, it apparently wasn’t big enough. Instead, he built a replica in Malta at a cost of US$1 million.</p> <p><strong>London Eye</strong></p> <p><strong>Where is it? </strong>London, England <strong>When was it built?</strong> 1998 <strong>Crunch the numbers:</strong> Standing at 135 metres tall, the London Eye rotates 26cm per second. A full revolution takes around 30 minutes. <strong>Fun fact: </strong>The London Eye has 32 capsules, one to represent each of the city’s 32 boroughs. However, they are numbered one to 33, skipping number 13 because it’s considered an unlucky number.</p> <p><em>Written by Bethany Plint. Republished with permission of <a href="https://www.mydiscoveries.com.au/stories/famous-landmarks/?slide=all">MyDiscoveries.</a></em></p>

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13 secret chambers inside famous landmarks

<div id="page1" class="slide-show"> <div id="test" class="slide"> <div class="slide-description"> <p>Talk about hiding in plain sight… each of these secret spots can be found in a famous landmark you may have visited. S<span>croll through the gallery to see the sites of these hidden chambers.</span></p> </div> </div> </div> <div id="page2" class="slide-show"> <div id="test" class="slide"> <div class="slide-title"><strong>1. The bomb shelter in the White House</strong></div> <div class="slide-description"> <p>You’d think the White House, in Washington DC, USA, would have lots of secret spaces, but there’s only one you’re allowed to know about without security clearance, and even that’s not exactly public knowledge. We’re talking about the bomb shelter President Franklin Delano Roosevelt had constructed in the East Wing in December 1941. While he was having it built, “mum” was the word; he acknowledged only that the East Wing construction was under construction.</p> </div> </div> </div> <div data-fuse="21833175956"><strong>2. Secret passage in Buckingham Palace</strong></div> <div id="page3" class="slide-show"> <div id="test" class="slide"> <div class="slide-description"> <p>Maybe the reason we associate secret passages with the dwellings of heads of state is that secret passages are pretty much standard fare in royal palaces. For example, Buckingham Palace has a secret door in the White Drawing Room, which connects to The Queen’s private residence. Although the White Drawing Room is open to visitors, the door is not. </p> <div class="at-below-post addthis_tool" data-url="https://www.readersdigest.com.au/travel/destinations/13-secret-chambers-inside-famous-landmarks"><strong>3. Her Majesty’s secret panic rooms</strong></div> </div> </div> </div> <div id="page4" class="slide-show"> <div id="test" class="slide"> <div class="slide-description"> <p>The passageway from the public to the private rooms at Buckingham Palace is just one of the secret spaces Queen Elizabeth II maintains there. In Buckingham Palace, as well as in Windsor Castle, The Queen has had “panic rooms” installed: very small bullet-proof, flame-retardant rooms in which she can hide in case of a bombing or any sort of terrorist attack.<span> </span></p> </div> </div> </div> <div id="page5" class="slide-show"> <div id="test" class="slide"> <div class="slide-title"><strong>4. The secret bowling alley at the Frick Collection</strong></div> <div class="slide-description"> <p>There’s a good reason you can’t go into the<span> </span>bowling alley at the Frick Collection<span> </span>(an art museum located in a mansion on Manhattan’s Upper East Side that was once the home of the family of steel magnate, Henry Frick). It has only one exit, and that’s against New York City Fire Code. There are other private rooms in the mansion, but they’re not closed to the public.</p> <div class="at-below-post addthis_tool" data-url="https://www.readersdigest.com.au/travel/destinations/13-secret-chambers-inside-famous-landmarks"><strong>5. The secret room in the arch at Washington Square Park</strong></div> </div> </div> </div> <div id="page6" class="slide-show"> <div id="test" class="slide"> <div class="slide-description"> <p>The Washington Square Park Arch in the USA looks just like the<span> </span><a href="https://arcdetriompheparis.com/">Arc de Triomphe</a>, but here is a major difference: whereas the Arc de Triomphe has an interior that is open to the public (it even includes a museum), the Washington Square Park Arch has an interior, but very few people have ever been inside it, and frankly,<span> </span><a href="https://untappedcities.com/2016/07/20/inside-nycs-washington-square-arch/">from these photos</a>, it looks super-spooky.<span> </span></p> </div> </div> </div> <div id="page7" class="slide-show"> <div id="test" class="slide"> <div class="slide-title"><strong>6. The little room hidden behind Mount Rushmore</strong></div> <div class="slide-description"> <p>Mount Rushmore in South Dakota, USA, is one of the 8 most famous monuments with little-known secrets. The secret it holds is a room hidden behind Lincoln’s head. The room was designed and is used as a “hall of records” that contains copies of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. What’s haunting about the secret room is that it the man who designed the monument died before the room was completed, and his original plan – to inscribe a written description of nine important events from U.S. history therein – was never realised. </p> </div> </div> </div> <div id="page8" class="slide-show"> <div id="test" class="slide"> <div class="slide-title"><strong>7. The secret quarters at Monticello</strong></div> <div class="slide-description"> <p>“As part of the $35-million Mountaintop Project restoration to return Monticello to the floorplan it had when [Thomas] Jefferson lived there, archaeologists and restoration experts have been renovating the building’s south wing,” writes<span> </span><em>Smithsonian Magazine</em><span> </span>of the building in Charlottesville, USA. In the course of their work, they discovered an area beside where Jefferson was believed to have slept, a hidden room. Small and windowless and believed to have been built in 1809, it may have been where Jefferson’s slave, Sally Hemings slept.<span> </span></p> <div class="at-below-post addthis_tool" data-url="https://www.readersdigest.com.au/travel/destinations/13-secret-chambers-inside-famous-landmarks"><strong>8. The secret cinema in the Paris Catacombs</strong></div> </div> </div> </div> <div id="page9" class="slide-show"> <div id="test" class="slide"> <div class="slide-description"> <p>Beneath the City of Paris lies over 300 kilometres of tunnels containing the remains of more than six million people who were relocated there from Parisian cemeteries between the 17th and the 19th centuries (because of cemetery overcrowding). The existence of the Catacombs is no secret, but here’s something that had been for quite a while: someone, or a group of someones, had secretly (and illegally) built an underground cinema and an adjoining restaurant. The police discovered the space in 2004, and a group called the Perforated Mexicans came forward to claim it as their work.<span> </span></p> </div> </div> </div> <div id="page10" class="slide-show"> <div id="test" class="slide"> <div class="slide-title"><strong>9. The secret room in the Medici Chapels</strong></div> <div class="slide-description"> <p>In 1975, the then-director of the Medici Chapels museum in Florence, Italy was searching for a new exit route for visitors and stumbled upon a trapdoor beneath a closet. Further investigation revealed sketches and even doodles on the walls. Although unsigned, their style suggests the hallmarks of Michelangelo’s “signature style,” according to<span> </span><em>Conde Nast Traveler</em>. The room has been closed for renovations ever since, although plans are underway for it to open to the public in 2020.<span> </span></p> </div> </div> </div> <div id="page11" class="slide-show"> <div id="test" class="slide"> <div class="slide-title"><strong>10. Empire State Building Floor 103</strong></div> <div class="slide-description"> <p>The observation deck on the 103rd floor of the Empire State Building closed to the public unless you’re someone super important. According to the building’s own fact sheet, “VIPs, celebrities, and dignitaries” are allowed “exclusive access,” to the top floor. Recently, Taylor Swift was allowed to take and model in photos from the almost secret room to promote her single, “Welcome to New York” according to<span> </span><em>Travel + Leisure</em>.</p> </div> </div> </div> <div id="page12" class="slide-show"> <div id="test" class="slide"> <div class="slide-title"><strong>11. The room in the torch at the Statue of Liberty</strong></div> <div class="slide-description"> <p>There’s a room inside the Statue of Liberty‘s torch, but the room has remained almost entirely closed since July 30, 1916, the day of the “Black Tom” explosion. This act of sabotage by German agents during World War I involved blowing up munitions housed in a warehouse on a neighbouring island in the New York Harbour, damaging the Statue, and especially the torch. The only people who’ve been in it since are National Park Service Staff who access it via a 12-metre ladder. There are no plans to reopen the torch, due to terrorism fears.</p> </div> </div> </div> <div id="page13" class="slide-show"> <div id="test" class="slide"> <div class="slide-title"><strong>12. Secret bus station at the Carter Hotel in NYC</strong></div> <div class="slide-description"> <p>Inside the Carter Hotel, an arguably seedy hotel in New York City’s Time’s Square, lies hidden a nearly century-old bus station. Built in the 1930s, when the Carter was known as the Dixie, the Central Union Bus Terminal was built partly underground. “After descending underground, buses would rotate on a 35-foot turntable, then proceed into a designated berth,” explains Scouting New York. It’s now a parking garage, but if you venture down there, you’ll still be able to find that turntable.<span> </span></p> </div> </div> </div> <div id="page14" class="slide-show"> <div id="test" class="slide"> <div class="slide-title"><strong>13. The hidden apartment inside the Eiffel Tower</strong></div> <div class="slide-description"> <p>Well, Paris certainly seems to have its share of rooms hidden in the plain sight of famous landmarks. This third one on this list, the hidden apartment on the third floor of the Eiffel Tower, was constructed by the architect of the tower, Gustave Eiffel as his own private apartment. It’s not such a secret anymore because it’s now it’s available for the public to tour. But according to<span> </span><em>Architectural Digest</em>, while Eiffel was alive, he kept the place pretty tightly locked down.</p> <p><em>Written by Lauren Cahn. This article first appeared in </em><span><a rel="noopener" href="https://www.readersdigest.com.au/travel/destinations/13-secret-chambers-inside-famous-landmarks" target="_blank"><em>Reader’s Digest</em></a><em>. </em></span></p> </div> </div> </div> <p><img style="width: 100px !important; height: 100px !important;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7820640/1.png" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/f30947086c8e47b89cb076eb5bb9b3e2" /></p>

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