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Architectural Breaks
Ten great destinations for the architecturally discerning traveller from Brazilian Modernism to twelfth-century Cambodian temples.
Angkor, Cambodia
The imperial heart of
the Khmer empire, Angkor was lost in the Cambodian rainforest until
French explorer Henri Mahout rediscovered it in 1860. Today its remote
location ensures it’s still dramatic on first sight. The empire reached
its height in the twelfth century, during which time the ancient
metropolis’s first building, the majestic temple of Angkor Wat, was
constructed, followed by Angkor Thom, a royal city within a city.
A
five-day tour of the classic Angkor sights with Guerba World Travel
costs from £265 per person. Flights are not included in the price of
the tour, but can be arranged and cost from around £500 return. Guerba Travel (01373 826 611/ www.guerba.co.uk).
Glasgow, Scotland
The
home city of architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh is littered with
examples of his style, which meshes Scots baronial with gothic and art
nouveau influences. Mackintosh produced his main works at the end of
the nineteenth century – the Glasgow School of Art, which he designed
in 1896, is his most famous construction, while the towering Lighthouse
on Mitchell Lane and Scotland Street School, south of the River Clyde,
provide further testament to his genius.
Glasgow
is served by a number of low-cost airlines, including British Airways,
EasyJet and EUjet. Train tickets cost from £40 return if booked in
advance. British Airways (0870 850 9850/ www.ba.com). EasyJet (08717 500 100/ www.easyjet.com). EUjet (0870 414 1414/ www.eujet.com). National Rail (08457 484 950/ www.nationalrail.co.uk).
Graz, Austria
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Presiding
over the semi-alpine region of Styria, Austria’s second city, Graz,
boasts an old town (Altstadt) filled with medieval streets, baroque
façades and Renaissance courtyards. Designated a UNESCO World Heritage
site, the Altstadt’s focal point is the wooded mound of the Schlossberg
rising above the River Mur. But it’s more recent architecture that’s
brought the city to Europe’s attention. Graz’s contemporary arts
centre, the new Kunsthaus, is nicknamed ‘The Blob’ for its globular
organic form and is now the most dominant building on the waterfront.
Fly to Graz from London Stansted with Ryanair from £43.92 return. Ryanair (0871 246 0000/ www.ryanair.co.uk).
Jaisalmer Fort, India
Sitting
at the crossroads of ancient trade routes and once ruled by the
marauding Bhatti Rajputs’ feudal chiefs, the revered city of Jaisalmer
in western Rajasthan was founded in the twelfth century. Rich merchants
poured their wealth into this walled citadel, which sits atop Trikuta
Hill and affords views of the Thar Desert for miles around. Within the
fort’s 99 bastions lie a warren of cobblestone streets, squares,
mansions (havelis) and temples adorned with intricate stone-carved
façades, latticework, screen windows, pavilions and balconies. Still a
bustling city and built using local sandstone, it’s in danger of
crumbling away, but is being restored with the help of the World
Monument Fund.
A 15-day tour of Rajasthan,
which includes three days in Jaisalmer, with Imaginative Traveller
costs £410, plus a local payment of $135 (approx £70). Flights are not
included in the price of the tour, but can be arranged and cost from
around £400 return. Imaginative Traveller (0800 316 2717/ www.imaginative-traveller.com).
Miami Beach, Florida
While
prime sun, surf and people-watching are often seen as Miami Beach’s
main attractions, it’s arguably the destination’s sublime art deco
architecture that provides its real allure. Compacted into an area no
bigger than Soho (but with a seafront, of course), the 800 or so 1920s
and ’30s buildings are all playschool shapes highlighted with green,
pink and blue pastel paintwork. A stroll down Ocean Drive at night is a
thrilling blur of art deco forms illuminated by blinding neon; stop on
chic Collins and gritty Washington Avenues to admire less ostentatious
examples.
Fly to Miami from London Heathrow with Virgin Atlantic from £362 return. Virgin Atlantic (08705 747747/ www.virgin-atlantic.com).
San Francisco, California
As
gobsmacking as it is, the Golden Gate Bridge is not San Francisco’s
only jaw-dropping structure. Also on the must-see list are the
Financial District’s 260-metre-high Transamerica Pyramid; the pretty
Victorian houses in the Western Addition, exemplified by so-called
Postcard Row; the $60 million red-brick San Francisco Museum of Modern
Art, designed by Swiss architect Mario Botta; the Hobart Building; and
the extensively restored historic Ferry Building, with a soaring clock
tower modelled on Seville’s twelfth-century bell tower.
Fly to San Francisco from London Heathrow with British Airways from £269 return. British Airways (0870 850 9850/ www.ba.com).
San Gimignano, Tuscany
Rising
334 metres above the Elsa Valley in the western Sienan province of
Tuscany, the village of San Gimignano offers a medieval prelude to the
modern skyscraper. Influenced by architecture from nearby Florence,
Siena and Pisa, 72 stone towers were built in the twelfth and
thirteenth centuries by opposing factions of the Ardinghelli (Guelphs)
and Salvucci (Ghibellines) families, as symbols of their wealth and
power. Sadly, only 13 remain today.
Fly to Pisa from London Stansted with Ryanair from £55.34 return. You can book a Hertz hire car to pick up from Pisa airport through the Ryanair website. It costs from £85.51 for four days. Ryanair (0871 246 0000/ www.ryanair.co.uk).
São Paulo, Brazil
São
Paulo, the largest city in South America, is a disorienting urban
sprawl. Yet, amid the chaos of the high-rises and the traffic, you’ll
find exciting, controversial works by Brazilian architect Oscar
Niemeyer, whose name is synonymous with the country’s modernist
movement. The Memorial da America Latina, the Copan building and the
city’s main park, Ibirapuera, are key examples.
Fly
from London Gatwick to São Paulo, via Lisbon, with TAP Air Portugal
from £408.30 return. Or fly from London Heathrow to São Paulo direct
with Varig from £633.60 return. TAP Air Portugal (0845 601 0932/ www.tap-airportugal.co.uk). Varig (0870 120 3020/ www.varig.co.uk).
Therme Vals, Switzerland
The
Therme Vals spa gives you the perfect excuse to combine an appreciation
of breathtaking design with a love of luxury. Originally constructed in
the 1960s on the natural thermal spring from which it takes its water,
it was rebuilt in 1996 by Swiss architect Peter Zumthor. Using quartz
taken from local deposits, the result is a modernist building set into
the mountainside above St Peters, with stone walls, high ceilings and
grassed-over roofs.
Therme Vals, Hotel Therme, 7132 Vals/GR, Switzerland (0041 81 926 8080/ www.therme-vals.ch). Doubles from €138, including use of spa. Fly to Zürich from London Gatwick with British Airways from £52 return. British Airways (0870 850 9850/ www.ba.com).
Toronto, Canada
With
the Ontario SuperBuild programme pumping money into Toronto’s
architectural landscape, this lakeside regional capital is one to
watch. The Ontario College of Art & Design’s Sharp Centre is a
monochrome block elevated on coloured stilts. The new opera house, the
Four Seasons Centre, is a work in progress, while the new home of the
Toronto Film Festival has only just left the drawing board. And Daniel
Libeskind’s ‘Crystal’ extension of the Royal Ontario Museum opens in
late 2005. If that wasn’t enough, there’s also the C$500-million
redesign and expansion of the Art Gallery of Ontario by homegrown
genius Frank Gehry, which gets under way this year.
Fly to Toronto from London Heathrow with Air Canada from £166. Air Canada (0871 220 1111/ www.aircanada.com).
Jessica Eveleigh
Time Out London Issue 1811: May 04-11 2005
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Edinburgh & Glasgow Eating & Drinking Guide
The new international Eating & Drinking series extends Time Out's acclaimed food and drink coverage beyond its London, Paris and New York bases for the first time. Now out of stock
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Miami & the Florida Keys
The ideal beach companion, the third edition of Time Out Miami gives the lowdown on what to see and where to be seen in the wildest, wackiest and most glamorous of US cities.
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San Francisco
San Francisco is the best city in the world. The evidence? Fantastic food, great bars, thriving arts, beautiful people – all packed into a city just seven miles by seven, with stunning views of bay and ocean.
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