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  • The Wave. Antoni Gaudi's wonderfully organic colonnade in Park Guell, Barcelona. A UNESCO world heritage site, it was built between 1900 and 1914, this was an ambitious plan by Gaudi and his patron, Eusebi Güell to build a housing development in a natural park. The whole place is designed to merge as sympathetically with the landscape as possible with natural designs and local materials.
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  • Sunrise looking out over the temples of Bagan. It is an ancient city in central Myanmar (formerly Burma), southwest of Mandalay. Standing on the eastern banks of the Ayeyarwady River, it’s known for the Bagan Archaeological Area, where more than 2,000 Buddhist monuments tower over green plains.
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  • Gaudi roof in Park Güell, Barcelona.
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  • Sunrise and balloons over the misty plains and temples of Bagan in central Burma is one of the world’s greatest archeological sites, a sight to rival Machu Picchu or Angkor Wat but – for the time being at least – without the visitors. The setting is sublime – a verdant 26 square-mile plain, part-covered in stands of palm and tamarind caught in a bend of the lazy-flowing Irrawaddy (Ayeyarwady) river and framed by the hazy silver-grey of distant mountains.
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  • Sunrise in Bagan, with a hint of drama. Bagan in central Burma is one of the world’s greatest archeological sites, a sight to rival Machu Picchu or Angkor Wat but – for the time being at least – without the visitors. The setting is sublime – a 26 square-mile plain, part-covered in stands of palm and tamarind caught in a bend of the lazy-flowing Irrawaddy (Ayeyarwady) river and framed by the hazy silver-grey of distant mountains.
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  • Carcassonne. A fascinating hill-top castle and fortress in the south-west of France, a UNESCO world heritage site it was painstakingly restored in the late 19th-century by Viollet-le-Duc, one of the founders of the modern science of conservation.
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  • Ait Benhaddou. Between Marrakesh and the Sahara desert, just over the High Atlas mountains is the fascinating and highly photogenic ighrem or fortified trading town, used (and repaired for) a huge range of films, from Game of Thrones, Gladiator and The Mummy to The Living Daylights and The Man Who Would Be King. The Kasbah is now a UNESCO world heritage site and worth exploring up to the fort on the hilltop
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  • Temple of the Great Jaguar, or Tikal Temple I. Built around 732CE this is one of the largest temples in Tikal, which itself is one of the largest cities and archaeological sites of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization in Mesoamerica. Re-discovered by the West in 1848 and now another UNESCO world heritage site, even today approaching the temples through the jungle adds a wonderful sense of mystery and curiosity. Sitting on top of the temples looking out over the jungle equally adds to the fascination.
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  • One of the many canal boat tours of Bruges. A city distinguished by its canals, cobbled streets and medieval buildings, a fascinating UNESCO World Heritage site to explore ...and large variety of chocolate shops to keep you going,
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  • The Great Migration in The Serengeti. Watching this natural wonder of a sea of nearly 2 million wildebeest, escorted by over 250,000 zebra around the Serengeti and Masai Maara , following the rains and food supply. No wonder it was chosen as one of the first natural World Heritage Sites.
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  • Carcassonne. A fascinating hill-top castle and fortress in the south-west of France, a UNESCO world heritage site it was painstakingly restored in the late 19th-century by Viollet-le-Duc, one of the founders of the modern science of conservation.
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