27 July 2025

Warsaw Hyperlapse – On a Bike

If Warsaw is on your bucket list or you are visiting Poland in the near future, take a look at this remarkable hyperlapse.  Youtube creator MrTiuro got on his bike and, well, the rest is here for you to see.  He starts in the Old Town district, journeys through it and then ends up in the new commercial hub in Warsaw’s Wola district.

You can’t really get a more honest  view of a city than driving (or in this case, cycling) through it.  Warsaw truly has a dual identity.  First, the old town charms with its cobblestone streets and oozes history.  It is difficult to believe that most of it was painstakingly rebuilt after World War II. Then, we reach the skyscrapers of the modern city – impressive.  However, Warsaw did get its first true skyscraper in 1955 with the completion of the Palace of Culture and Science (Pałac Kultury i Nauki), a towering building that remains one of the city’s most recognisable landmarks – and you will see that too in the video below.

I don’t want you to divert your eyes from the buildings, but when I ran through the video a second time, there was one thing that really struck me (I live in London, which looks filthy by comparison).  That is, the streets are spotless.  Absolutely spotless.  I couldn’t spot that many bins for public use (although I did see some in the video), so I have to assume one of two things – or maybe it's both of them!  Either the Poles are a fastidiously tidy people who highly disapprove of littering or the City Cleaning Authority (Zarząd Oczyszczania Miasta, ZOM) is one of the best in the world.  Or both.  Regardless, enjoy this whirlwind tour through the streets of the city of Warsaw. Who knows, maybe in a short time, you will be ambling through them yourself.

20 November 2022

Lençóis Maranhenses - Brazil's Lagoons Among The Dunes

When you first see it, Lençóis Maranhenses in northeastern Brazil appears much like a typical desert: sand – and lots of it. 

Yet closer inspection quickly reveals pools of water among the ridged hills of sand, lining the landscape with their rich hues of green and blue. One of the most visually contradictory sights on our planet, there are lagoons among the dunes.

14 February 2022

If You Have Never Wanted to Visit Barcelona, You Will After You Watch This


Bareclona is one of my favorite cities and it is easy to see why after watching this fantastic hyperlapse by Kirill Neiezhmakov.  If you are new to the cosmopolitan capital of Spain’s Catalonia region this will probably make you want to visit Barcelona in the very near future.  This video shows off two things – first the beauty and diversity of Barcelona and its architecture: secondly, Neiezhmakov’s consummate skills when it comes to the art of the hyperlapse.

28 January 2018

If You Have Never Wanted to Visit Turkey, You Will After Watching This


Take a trip to Istanbul, passing the Black Sea Coast, to the vastness of Eastern Anatolia, then returning over otherworldly Cappadocia and enjoying the sun at the Turquoise Coast. It’s all here in this amazing video by Vincent Urban who should really be paid by the Turkish Tourist Board!  Three of our favorite Turkish destinations are here: Love Valley, Mount Nemrut and the unforgettable Pamukkale (follow the links to read our features on these amazing places).

10 December 2016

The Supertrees of Singapore

They look like a set from a forthcoming science fiction movie but these supertrees in Singapore are very much of this world.  A collection of eighteen of these trees, varying in size from 80 to 160 feet (25 and 50 meters), creates an amazing backdrop for Singapore's central business district.  What is more, they actually mimic real trees.

Eleven of these immense structures are fitted with solar panels.  The sunlight caught by these energies is converted in to energy which helps to run this thriving business center.  They are part of an area known as Gardens by the Bay.  Yet it will be many years before the energy they create recoup their initial cost.  The entire garden, despite its energy-efficient and green credentials, not to mention its increasing reputation as a conservation area for rare plants, cost three quarters of a million US dollars to build.

9 June 2013

Living Statue Levitation

Opinion is divided on the subject of living statues.  If you have traveled to any major world city then you know who I mean: the street entertainers who spend hours dressing up and applying makeup and then spend the rest of the day rooted to the spot (unless to collect money from bemused tourists or frighten small children, both of which are fine by me considering the labors they have gone through to effect their appearance).  They either fascinate, creep out or both in equal parts. Yet this is a new one on me – the living statue apparently suspended in mid-air and looking quite relaxed about it too. So, how does he do it?

These shots of a very  aurelian Prince Charles were taken last week by Flickr Photographer Eugene Kaspersky.  Taking possibly the only opportunity to bask in the British sunshine he will have this side of the next century, the heir to the throne apparently whisked himself away from Buckingham Palace and set himself up on his invisible throne on London’s South Bank.

5 March 2012

Titanic Belfast - Bright New Star on a City's Skyline

Something wonderful is about to happen in Belfast, Northern Ireland.  A hundred years after the Titanic set sail on her catastrophic maiden voyage a new center dedicated to the ship, her makers and passengers, will open in the city which built her. Titanic Belfast stands - magnificent and resplendent - in the very place the great ship was built. It is a structure as colossal (one hesitates before saying titanic) as the ship it honors.

It is the (albeit aluminum) icing on the cake for a city whose reputation once reached a nadir – seen by many as the Beirut or Mogadishu of Western Europe. Yet since the Good Friday Agreement of 1998, Belfast has undergone what can only be described, without hyperbole, as a renaissance. Visitors who remember the low points of the 1970s and 80s are often astonished by the transformation yet tourism is yet to truly burgeon.

Titanic Belfast hopes to change that – and even the cynically hearted grudgingly admit that it has every chance of doing so. It is certainly a gamble – it cost £97m (a cool US$153m). 

You can see where the money was spent just by looking at the bravura façade – even though some people have compared it rather unkindly to a Jawa Sandcrawler from the Star Wars movies (pictured left for quick comparison!). 

However, the interior promises to be something of a revelation as well.

A replica of the Titanic was, of course, out of the question.  As well as being the height of tackiness what Belfast needed was to look to the future as well as to revere the past.  The homage, of course, is unmistakable – it is inspired by hulls under construction in the shipyard and the parallels are driven home by some of the facts and figures.

You may get blinded on a sunny day if you don’t wear shades.  The huge bulk of the center is covered by 3,000 aluminum panels, sixty percent of which are unique.  The ‘hulls’ of Titanic Belfast are the same height of the original ship from keel to deck. The ship’s capacity was 3,547 people – the very same number of visitors that Titanic Belfast can hold at any one time.

Talking of people - a nod here to the (soon to be) long suffering staff who will work at Titanic Belfast. Why long suffering? Look at the two pictures above. Although these photographs were taken when the interior was still under recent construction, do they remind you of anything?  It will, no doubt, be the scene of a thousand Jack and Rose impressions per day. Imagine having to put up with that!

A century separates the two giants of their respective ages on the Belfast skyline but the time in which they were built is similar – around twenty six months.  There are 40,000 tons of concrete in Titanic Belfast’s foundations, nearly the same as for Titanic.

Titanic Belfast is to be found alongside the Titanic Slipways, the Harland and Wolff Drawing Offices and Hamilton Graving Dock – the exact same places where Titanic was planned, constructed and launched in 1912.

The building plays host to the story of the ill fated liner.  As Belfast was where RMS Titanic was born, the history starts in her planning – and through to the launch.  It will also cover that infamous maiden voyage and the ship’s last, dreadful hours. There will also be contemporary tales to tell – how the wreck was discovered at the bottom of the ocean and how its exploration continues.

Altogether there will be nine galleries, each devoted to a different element of the ships century long history. Upon opening on March 31st, 2012, Titanic Belfast will be the World's Largest Titanic Visitor Attraction.  This is most certainly a city determined that its future will not be a footnote describing quiet decline and gentle retreat from history’s pages.  Titanic Belfast – the city’s newest and proudest symbol – will, one hopes, help ensure just the opposite.

All photographs by and courtesy of Christopher Heaney. Kuriositas would also like to thank Aisling Dinsmore of Stakeholder Communications for her kind assistance. Click on any of the pictures above to visit the website and buy tickets.

4 February 2012

The Dead Cities of Syria

Syria continues to be in the news as its government persists in its use of violence to crack down on protests inspired by the Arab Spring. It is the latest of many upheavals the country has been through since its formation as a state. In the northwest of the country are reminders of past turmoil and upheaval. Over 700 abandoned settlements bear the collective name The Dead Cities of Syria.

These abandoned municipalities scatter the landscape and contain the remains of a confident, vibrant and sophisticated culture – one which effectively disappeared over fifteen hundred years ago. Left behind, incredible and ancient structures are testament to the ingenuity and piety of the people who once lived here.

The Church of Saint Simeon Stylites is perhaps the most famous of the buildings in the area.  It is the oldest Byzantine church in the world and dates back to around 475 CE.  It commemorates Saint Simeon who sat atop a high pillar to preach to those who came from far and near to hear him.  This vast martyrium has almost as much floor space as the Haga Sophia in Istanbul (which was, of course, then called Constantinople).

Saint Simeon's pillar is still evident, transported to the church after his death. Yet over the many centuries, pilgrims have chipped away at it for souvenirs until the pillar now is little more than a boulder.

Between the cities of Aleppo and Hama there is a limestone massif and it is here these ancient settlements were built by their once prosperous peoples. The area is about thirty kilometers in width yet is several times longer – extending to almost 140 kilometers in length. It isn’t hard, considering this thin, long concentration of settlements to divine the reason for their presence – trade!

The names of the cities are numerous: Jaradeh, Telanissos, al-Bara, Surkania, Dar Qita, Ruweiha, Surkania.  All are silent witness to a civilization now vanished in to the footnotes of history. Their importance is somewhat blithely underestimated by modern locals who still pick around them, occasionally plant small olive groves among the ruins - and even climb them (go back to the fourth photograph!).

Trade brought in gold and silver, which was used to fund the building of this exquisite Christian Byzantine architecture.  The ethnic makeup of the citizens of these cities would have been diverse, as is so often the case on a trade route. Yet the practiced religion of the cities’ populations seems to have been overwhelmingly Christian. A great many of the surviving buildings are churches.

The nature of the settlements has been a matter of debate for many years. Some argue that these forgotten cities were built by a prosperous and thriving peasant class which slowly strung out its line of influence. It is true that there are very few specifically urban features along the length of the settlements although sturdy domestic architecture has weathered the centuries well.

Others argue that these were, indeed, cities rather than a string of peasant collectives. The main produce of the area was olive oil and the international demand for this valuable product would have ensured an infrastructure comparable to other thriving towns and cities towards the end of the era of antiquity.

Serjilla and Bara, the best preserved of the cities, would seem to support this opinion. There is a bath house in the former, always a sign the prosperity of a city and was built around 470 CE when Christianity was well established.  There is also a meeting place for men, a kind of Byzantine gentleman’s club where important decisions would be made. Its main source of income was grapes and olives, grown in the fertile soil of the natural basin in which it was built.

Bara, on the other hand, seems to have been a military base. Perhaps for this reason it survived longer than the other cities. It was conquered by crusaders in 1098 and taken back by Muslim forces thirty years later.  It was a severe earthquake later in the twelfth century which forced its eventual abandonment. Bara’s retention of population is unusual in the area.

One thing is for sure: the inhabitants of most of these lost cities packed up and left slowly but surely in the sixth and seventh centuries.  The area had been conquered by the Arabs and this meant that trade routes shifted.  Warfare did not do for these incredible settlements but economics. The population declined and dwindled to the point that the cities were eventually deserted.

It is almost comforting to reflect that despite its post apocalyptic appearance, the denizens of these places, the original names of which are long forgotten, were not put to the sword. Rather they headed towards more prosperous cities along newer trade routes, there to settle hopefully in peace. They left behind their churches, homes, meeting places - and their dead.

As the Arab Spring began in early 2011 the dead cities of Syria became a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Tourism to Syria is at the moment effectively suspended but when civil stability returns the local people around the dead cities will resume giving those willing to go off the beaten track a warm welcome.



Image Credit
First picture - Flickr User James_Gordon_Los_angeles