Stonehenge Moves to London

Built in 1828 to commemorate the Duke of Wellington’s defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte, the Wellington Arch at Hyde Park, London is set to become a public gallery. Launching the new exhibition site, called the Quadriga Gallery (referencing the sculptural group decorating the exterior),is the Stonehenge: Monumental Journey show just in time for the Olympic’s crowd.

The elaborate victory arch has previously served as a traffic island and was at one time home to London’s most diminutive police station. Originally facing the entrance to Hyde Park, the Wellington Arch was moved to its current location in 1883.

Hat-tip to Evan Smythe for this post

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Rome Reborn

I was recently searching for some information on the astonishing Roman aqueduct in Segovia, Spain when I stumbled on this stunning digital animation exploring Rome in 320 A.D.. If you’ve every visited The Eternal City, or dreamed of going there, this fabulous video fly-through will give you chills. You can discover more about the Rome Reborn project on their website .

Here’s some info on the project:

“Rome Reborn is an international initiative whose goal is the creation of 3D digital models illustrating the urban development of ancient Rome from the first settlement in the late Bronze Age (ca. 1000 B.C.) to the depopulation of the city in the early Middle Ages (ca. A.D. 550). With the advice of an international Scientific Advisory Committee, the leaders of the project decided that A.D. 320 was the best moment in time to begin the work of modeling. At that time, Rome had reached the peak of its population, and major Christian churches were just beginning to be built. After this date, few new civic buildings were built. Much of what survives of the ancient city dates to this period, making reconstruction less speculative than it must, perforce, be for earlier phases. But having started with A.D. 320, the Rome Reborn team intends to move both backwards and forwards in time until the entire span of time foreseen by our mission has been covered.

History

Since 1997, the Virtual World Heritage Laboratory of the University of Virginia (VWHL), the UCLA Experiential Technology Center (ETC), the Reverse Engineering (INDACO) Lab at the Politecnico di Milano, the Ausonius Institute of the CNRS and the University of Bordeaux-3, and the University of Caen have collaborated on a project to create a digital model of ancient Rome as it appeared in late antiquity. The notional date of the model is June 21, 320 A.D.

Purpose of the 3D model

The primary purpose of this phase of the project was to spatialize and present information and theories about how the city looked at this moment in time, which was more or less the height of its development as the capital of the Roman Empire. A secondary, but important, goal was to create the cyberinfrastructure whereby the model could be updated, corrected, and augmented. Spatialization and presentation involve two related forms of communication: (1) the knowledge we have about the city has been used to reconstruct digitally how its topography, urban infrastructure (streets, bridges, aqueducts, walls, etc.), and individual buildings and monuments might have looked; and (2) whenever possible, the sources of archaeological information or speculative reasoning behind the digital reconstructions, as well as valuable online resources for understanding the sites of ancient Rome, have been made available to users. The model is thus a representation of the state of our knowledge (and, implicitly, of our ignorance) about the urban topography of ancient Rome at various periods of time. Beyond this primary use, the model can function in other ways. It can be used to teach students or the general public about how the city looked; it can be used to gather data not otherwise available, such as the alignment of built features in the city with respect to each other or to natural features and phenomena; and, it can be used to run urban or architectural experiments not otherwise possible, such as how well the city or the buildings within it functioned in terms of heating and ventilation, illumination, circulation of people, etc. Finally, a digital model can be easily updated to reflect corrections to the model or new archaeological discoveries.”

 

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Tokyo Aglow

Last week we posted an amusing little story about a scheme to make Amsterdam’s historic canals glow via bioluminescent bacteria. Well, Tokyo already set its Sumida River aglow during the first weekend in May.

The inaugural Tokyo Hotaru Festival was launched on May 5th and featured a moving display of more than 100,000 LED lights designed by Panasonic to resemble fireflies (hotaru) when afloat. The solar powered lights only illuminate upon contact with water and were all collected in large nets at the end of the night.

If your Japanese language skills are up to the task, the Hotaru Festival website has more info.

Hat-tip to Johnny Strategy for the post.

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How Venice Works

Venice is not only a great city; it’s a complex archipelago made up of 124 different islands, dissected by 183 canals and crossed by 483 bridges. This marvelous film produced by the city of Venice explains how this fabulous, confounding and complicated place manages to function for its 60,000 residents and 3 million annual visitors.

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Visit England

VisitEngland, the official national tourist board of England has released a handy free app just in time for the big Olympic hoopla. The app, titled Enjoy England, offers easy acess to thousands of tourist attractions around the country. It is fairly simplistic, as apps go, but allows for searching thousands of places of interest to visitors, has helpful maps and directions, and tools for trip planning. TBTP reader and contributor Evan Smythe has alerted us to Enjoy England and offered the following app review:

“The app is very straightforward – you just enter a location you wish to search, or pick from the drop-down list under ‘Select Location’. If you pick London for example, it currently lists 492 locations that you can visit. You can then refine this list using the ‘Categories’ button, which allows you to pick places that offer free admission, are indoor, outdoor, or somewhere that Visit England believes is a ‘Must see’. Alternatively you can use the ‘Location’ button to identify places within a certain distance from your current location – 1 mile, 2 miles and so on. Once you click through to the attraction itself, there’s a shot description, an address and, at the bottom, a very useful function, “Get Directions”. This then takes you through to the native Google Maps application where you can display the route from your current location to the attraction, either by car, public transport or on foot.

There’s also an option to ‘Upload a Suggestion’ if there’s a particular attraction that you think should be listed. The ‘Enjoy England’ app is quite basic, but I can see it being useful if you’re at a loose end and want to explore the local area – there may be places nearby that you’ve not discovered yet. You can find ‘Enjoy England’ in both the Apple iTunes and Google stores on your phone, and they’re both free.”

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Travel For Enlightenment

Lavinia Spalding, editor of The Best Women’s Travel Writing 2011 (Travelers’ Tales) and the author of Writing Away: A Creative Guide to Awakening the Journal-Writing Traveler, recently spoke at a TEDx conference in Park City, Utah on the existential power of travel stories to help us discover our shared humanity. Take a look:

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Land of Dreams

In a public-private partnership between the U.S. government and the travel industry, this new $12.3 million ad campaign, called Land of Dreams, is about to be launched with distribution in Europe, Asia, South America and Canada over the coming months. The marketing entity, called Brand USA, hopes to inspire international travelers to visit the USA and spend, spend, spend. The swarmy little video features Roseanne Cash sing the title song. Take a peek. Would this inspire you to visit the U.S. ?

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Free Travel Apps

The popular travel guide publisher Fodor’s announced recently that they will be providing a series of city guides as mobile apps for iOS. These new apps are free for the first time. Apps from the Fodor’s Travel imprint offer solid information and recommendations for tourist attractions, eating entertainment, and other travel information. Now you can get around foreign cities without carrying a physical travel book.

The new versions of Fodor’s apps are available for New York, San Francisco, London, Paris, Rome, and Barcelona. In addition to the information you’d usually expect to find in a travel book, the apps allow you to search venues by price, see what’s nearby, bookmark your favorite spots, add field notes, and download maps before you travel so that you can access them online without paying for data roaming.

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Ten Most Read Books in the World

British business writer James Chapman compiled a list of the Top 10 Most Read Books in the World based on the number of copies of each title sold during the last 50 years. Utilizing Chapman’s list, Chicago designer Jared Fanning created this very cool infographic . Is it accurate ? I’m not sure, but it’s clever.

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Don’t Be Evil (or rude)

Somehow we missed National Etiquette Week (May 7-11), but thanks to Toronto’s Christopher Rouleau from The Urban Etiquette Project we can politely make amends. Back in December 2011, Rouleau launched the Toronto Etiquette Project, which involved a set of hand-out cards that gently reminded Toronto residents to treat each other with courtesy. Now thanks to popular demand he has created the U.E.P. to help city dwellers around the world behave in a more civilized manner.

You can download your own cards at Rouleau’s website.

© Christopher Rouleau

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