Monuments slated for face-lift

Posted on 24th April 2012 in The monuments of world



Monuments slated for face-lift

Staff file photo by Skip Lawrence

Raising the American flag during a Memorial Day service at Woodsboro Memorial Park are Dwight Reynolds, past post commander, left and Steve Blank, former post commander.

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Three Frederick war monuments are scheduled for a spring cleaning by conservators this week.

The monuments include the Frederick World War I Memorial in Memorial Park near downtown, the War Memorial in Woodsboro and the Braddock Monument along Old National Pike in Braddock Heights.

Conservators began their work in Lonaconing, in Allegheny County, as snow and rain fell Monday morning, said Nancy Kurtz, national register coordinator for the Maryland Historical Trust.

The trust is directing the work, which was funded by the Maryland Department of Veterans Affairs. Cost of the week’s cleaning is $14,300, Kurtz said.

About 50 of the state’s 400 military memorials honoring Maryland veterans are on a three-year cleaning rotation to protect bronze and copper, including the three in Frederick County. Work is expected to take about a week.

Conservators use gentle residue- and perfume-free detergent to clean the monuments of dirt and corrosion and will then add wax after heating the monuments with a blow torch, Kurtz said.

“By using this wax with heat, it sort of saturates the bronze and darkens it,” Kurtz said, adding, “It kind of gives it that wet look, and it gives it a lot of protection.”

Conservators will come to Frederick to begin cleaning the Frederick WWI Memorial Friday, Kurtz said. The bronze sculpture is a life-size figure of Victory atop Vermont granite. It features eight bronze tablets with the names of 2,095 people from Frederick County who served in WWI, including 83 who died. It was made by Italian sculptor, Giuseppe Moretti — whose work appears in places such as Pittsburgh and Birmingham, Ala. — and was dedicated in 1924.

Kurtz said work is expected to be completed on the Braddock Heights and Woodsboro memorials Saturday. The Braddock Monument, dedicated in 1924, marks the site of a spring reported to have been used by British Gen. Edward Braddock and his aide, Lt. Col. George Washington, as they traveled to Fort Duquesne in Pennsylvania during the French and Indian War in 1755, Kurtz said. The Woodsboro Memorial commemorates more than 200 people who served in both World Wars, including 10 who died.

“Once they’re treated, we want to keep them in good condition,” Kurtz said. “We don’t want them to go back to green again.”

Larrie Welsh, commander of the Frederick post of AMVETS, said he thinks the work is a nice way to honor veterans. Welsh said he served in the Army in Germany during the Cold War.

“I think they have special meaning to all the vets,” Welsh said of the monuments. “I think you like to keep your heritage. You don’t want to forget your history.”

Exploring Malta by day and by knights

Posted on 16th April 2012 in The monuments of world

With its rich architectural heritage, the sunny and scenic island of Malta is a history buff’s dream

By Tom Lawrence

MALTA, April 16 PA – Sitting on the shaded roof of a rustic farmhouse sipping a delicious array of crisp whites and sumptuous reds, I peered out into the endless sea of sun-kissed grapevines surrounding me.

The picturesque 19-hectare vineyard could easily have been mistaken for one in Tuscany or even on the fertile grounds of Cape Verde.

But in fact I was sampling my mouth-watering flight of fine wines in the middle of a former RAF airfield on the Mediterranean island of Malta.

Like a number of locations and landmarks on the tiny sun-baked archipelago, the Meridiana Wine Estate has close ties to World War Two and Britain’s 150-year colonial occupation.

However, what many people fail to realise is that the scenic island, nestled 100km off the south coast of Sicily, has so much more to offer.

Malta is a vibrant melting pot of history, art and architecture, richly influenced by the many cultures imposed on its rocky shores over the last 7000 years.

I spent a week based in the bustling town of St Julian’s on the eastern coast, a lively hub of hotels, restaurants, bars, shops and casinos.

It stands just 8km away from the capital Valetta, a fortified city built in the mid-16th century by the Knights of St John – arguably the most influential group to have settled on the island.

In 1530, after being chased out of Rhodes by the Ottomans, Charles V of Spain allowed the knights to base themselves in Malta in return for religious devotion and the generous annual rent of just one falcon.

Three decades later, the Roman Catholic Order successfully staved off another attack from the bloodthirsty Turks during the Siege of Malta, prompting Grand Master Jean Parisot de Valette to build the walled citadel of Valetta to protect his people from further invasions. The knights remained in Malta until 1798, leaving their legacy etched onto the landscape forever.

My guide Audrey who, like all the Maltese spoke perfect English, led me into Valetta, which is flanked on three sides by the sparkling sea and, with a population of just over 6000, is Europe’s smallest capital.

The morning sun lit up the ornate facades and enclosed painted balconies of the golden limestone villas which tower over the wide cobbled streets.

And as we snaked our way through the gridded network of roads and open squares, I could immediately see why the tiny country has one of the highest densities of historical sites in the world.

Home to 320 monuments, including grand cathedrals, opulent churches, statues, fountains and palaces, Valetta resembles an open-air museum and is one of nine World Heritage sites to grace Malta.

It also boasts a host of high-end boutiques, alfresco cafes and restaurants, with a peppering of British post boxes, red phone kiosks and even a branch of Marks and Spencer serving as a reminder of the island’s colonial influences.

Our first port of call was St John’s Co-Cathedral, built by the Order as its central church.

After passing through the threshold of its imposing exterior, I encountered the breathtaking spectacle of intricately painted vaulted ceilings, gilded walls and a floor covered by 350 marble tombstones of former knights.

“This is our Baroque gem and the most important church in the whole of Malta,” Audrey said proudly.

The cathedral’s guarded oratory houses two original masterpieces by Caravaggio, with his largest-ever work, the spine-tingling Beheading of John the Baptist, the jewel in the crown.

The Italian artist came to Malta and painted for free in exchange for his induction into the knights’ prestigious Order, which today includes the likes of Sir Cliff Richard.

Our next stop was the Grandmaster’s Palace in George’s Square, the distinguished seat of Malta’s president and parliament which houses a large collection of historical artefacts.

The stately chambers are decorated with beautiful frescoes depicting scenes from the Great Siege, while steel suits of armour used by the knights line the corridors and huge intricately-woven tapestries given to the Order as gifts hang in the tapestry room.

After enjoying a frothing cappuccino and ice cream at Caffe Cordina in the shaded confines of Republic Square, we made our way to Upper Barracca Gardens, the highest point of the city walls.

As fountains trickled in the background, I took in the stunning panoramic views of Malta’s Grand Harbour, the largest natural harbour in the Med, which was a Royal Navy base until 1979 when the nation became a republic.

Audrey suggested we took a tour in a disa – similar to a gondola – for a closer look at the towering coralline walls of Fort St Angelo and the three cities of Vittoriosa, Cospicua and Senglea, which straddle the harbour.

As we took to the blue waters, she reeled off a list of Hollywood blockbusters including Gladiator, Troy and The Count Of Monte Cristo, which have made use of the harbour’s epic beauty.

A-listers with homes on the island include David Beckham, while billionaire oligarch Roman Abramovich apparently has one of his yachts moored in the adjoining Marsamxett harbour.

We arrived in Vittoriosa, the knights’ original capital, stopping for a lunch of mussels and fresh lampuka – a sweet-tasting local fish – at the idyllic waterfront restaurant Riviera della Marina, before touring the quiet town.

Navigating the narrow, undulating streets, I was treated to an authentic slice of traditional Maltese life, with the doors of the locals’ homes left wide open while young children played on the cobbles.

The rest of my trip was spent exploring the plethora of other historical gems that Malta’s 310.80 square kilometres have to offer.

Touring the medieval walled citadel of Mdina, home to the National Museum of Natural History, palaces of past Grand Masters and the Bishop’s Cathedral, I could see why it is nicknamed “The Silent City”.

With a population of just 200, only the cars of the residents are allowed within its confines, making the streets of the island’s original capital peacefully serene during the day.

I also trod the grand marble staircases and walled gardens of the Palazzo Parisio – described by many as a miniature Versailles – a stately home in the ancient village of Naxxar built in the 1800s.

The most exhilarating part of my trip came as I whizzed along the cliff tops of Dingli on a Segway – one of the best ways to see the island’s countryside.

Hurtling along, I was treated to glorious views of the west coast and the tiny uninhabited island of Filfla, used for target practice by the RAF bombers.

The mostly rocky island also has a handful of idyllic beaches to the north, with Golden Bay and Gnejna the best on offer.

A greater variety is found on Gozo, Malta’s sister island, only a 20-minute ferry ride away and blessed with stunning natural wonders including Calypso’s Cave which overlooks the red sands of Ramla Bay and the Azure Window, a giant doorway of rock surrounded by deep blue sea.

The rustic Hotel Ta’ Cenc on Gozo is a popular retreat for celebrities including Sir Sean Connery and Sir Alex Ferguson.

After experiencing Malta’s rich and varied history, it can truly be said that it’s so much more than just a small Mediterranean island.

IF YOU GO: MALTA

- BEST FOR: Fascinating history.

- TIME TO GO: September/October – the searing mid-summer heat has cooled to a more bearable mid-20s.

- DON’T MISS: St John’s Co-Cathedral.

- NEED TO KNOW: Malta is the fifth most densely populated place in the world, so avoid roads in rush hour.

- DON’T FORGET: With 97 per cent of the coastline rocky, don’t expect a beach holiday.

Italy's museum czar's recipe: Cultural tourism can help end recession

Posted on 11th April 2012 in The monuments of world

ROME – One of Italy‘s top culture officials has pushed private investment in the country’s museums and galleries and the seemingly insatiable Chinese and Indian appetites for art and archaeology as the way to pull the country out of its recession.

Mario Resca, a former CEO of McDonald’s Italian operations who was appointed in 2008 by the government of Silvio Berlusconi to be director-general of the Culture Ministry, said that an increase in ticket sales to Italian museums has not been matched by an increase in state finding .

Chatting with a small group of foreign correspondents in Rome, Resca said the number of visitors to state museums and archaeological sites increased by some 15 per cent from 2009 to 2010 and by about 7 per cent from 2010 to 2011.

But budgets and investment have not risen with visitor numbers. Resca acknowledges that the budget shortfall isn’t about to be reversed, thanks to the latest round of austerity cuts ordered by Berlusconi’s successor, Premier Mario Monti.

Instead, Resca proposes that Italy should look to private investment to develop the economic potential of its cultural heritage, adding that Monti was “making a mistake” by not pushing for tax breaks to encourage private investment in Italy’s museums and archaeological tourist sites.

“It’s hard to restart (the economy) with manufacturing,” Resca argued. Selling more Italian cars and refrigerators isn’t about to make the country the global leader in manufacturing, but Italy is well-positioned to become the world’s No. 1 in tourism centred on culture, he said.

“Indians, Chinese don’t come to swim or ski in Italy but to see our culture,” Resca added.

Appointed to tap the economic potential of Italy’s artistic and archaeological heritage, the culture ministry official has pushed for longer museum hours to encourage more Italians to visit them. “If we close a museum at 5 p.m., only vacationers can go.”

At the time, the appointment of a former hamburger chain executive to improve the situation of Italy’s museums and monuments set off an outcry from museum directors and art world officials worried that he lacked the professional background for the post.

Resca, whose mandate runs out in a few months, brushed off the fears.

“Maybe an art historian isn’t the best person to manage Pompeii, with 900 employees, contracts to stipulate,” said Resca.

Italy's museum czar: Culture can save the economy

Posted on 11th April 2012 in The monuments of world

ROME (AP) — One of Italy‘s top culture officials has pushed private investment in the country’s museums and galleries and the seemingly insatiable Chinese and Indian appetites for art and archaeology as the way to pull the country out of its recession.

Mario Resca, a former CEO of McDonald’s Italian operations who was appointed in 2008 by the government of Silvio Berlusconi to be director-general of the Culture Ministry, said that an increase in ticket sales to Italian museums has not been matched by an increase in state finding .

Chatting with a small group of foreign correspondents in Rome, Resca said the number of visitors to state museums and archaeological sites increased by some 15 percent from 2009 to 2010 and by about 7 percent from 2010 to 2011.

But budgets and investment have not risen with visitor numbers. Resca acknowledges that the budget shortfall isn’t about to be reversed, thanks to the latest round of austerity cuts ordered by Berlusconi’s successor, Premier Mario Monti.

Instead, Resca proposes that Italy should look to private investment to develop the economic potential of its cultural heritage, adding that Monti was “making a mistake” by not pushing for tax breaks to encourage private investment in Italy’s museums and archaeological tourist sites.

“It’s hard to restart (the economy) with manufacturing,” Resca argued. Selling more Italian cars and refrigerators isn’t about to make the country the global leader in manufacturing, but Italy is well-positioned to become the world’s No. 1 in tourism centered on culture, he said.

“Indians, Chinese don’t come to swim or ski in Italy but to see our culture,” Resca added.

Appointed to tap the economic potential of Italy’s artistic and archaeological heritage, the culture ministry official has pushed for longer museum hours to encourage more Italians to visit them. “If we close a museum at 5 p.m., only vacationers can go.”

At the time, the appointment of a former hamburger chain executive to improve the situation of Italy’s museums and monuments set off an outcry from museum directors and art world officials worried that he lacked the professional background for the post.

Resca, whose mandate runs out in a few months, brushed off the fears.

“Maybe an art historian isn’t the best person to manage Pompeii, with 900 employees, contracts to stipulate,” said Resca.

Toronto stock market higher after Alcoa reassures on earnings, outlook

Posted on 11th April 2012 in The monuments of world

TORONTO – The Toronto stock market was higher Wednesday as a strong earnings report from aluminum giant Alcoa Inc. raised hopes that the first-quarter earnings season won’t be as bad as expected.

The S&P/TSX composite index ran ahead 82.41 points to 12,017.7 while the TSX Venture Exchange was ahead 9.81 points to 1,440.91.

The Canadian dollar was up 0.27 of a cent to 99.86 cents US.

U.S. markets were sharply higher after the largest U.S. aluminum manufacturer said Tuesday after the market close that it earned 10 cents a share in the first quarter against expectations of a four cent a share loss. Alcoa is considered a barometer for the U.S. economy as it sells its aluminum to a wide range of customers.

Alcoa also reaffirmed its forecast of a seven per cent increase in 2012 global aluminum demand and its shares were ahead 8.05 per cent to US$10.07 in New York.

The Dow Jones industrials rose 99.6 points to 12,815.53.

The Nasdaq composite index gained 36.89 points to 3,028.11 and the S&P 500 index climbed 13.2 points to 1,371.79.

North American markets finished lower for a fifth straight session Tuesday, with investors sidelined amid data from China indicating slower growth in imports and exports while Spain saw its 10-year bond yield hit four-month highs of over 5.9 per cent.

But traders have also been nervous about how the first-quarter earnings season will play out.

Analyst expectations for earnings for companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 index went from anticipation of an increase of about three per cent early in the quarter to an expected decline of 0.1 per cent, according to FactSet.

Such a dip would follow three straight years of strong double-digit earnings growth.

“For this cycle, I think we have seen peak earnings, peak profitability,” said Paul Vaillancourt , CEO of Canadian Wealth Management in Calgary.

“But companies are not going to start losing money this quarter, it’s just the rate of growth will decelerate. And so you won’t see the same quarter over quarter, year over year growth in earnings but that’s what happens at this stage in the recovery.”

He said what is important is that the U.S. economic recovery has become self-sustaining “and that’s what really matters.”

Tuesday’s losses had erased all gains on the TSX for 2012, leaving the main index about 20 points shy of where it started the year.

The European debt crisis continued to be in focus Wednesday as Italy’s borrowing costs more than doubled in a couple of bond auctions due to renewed market uncertainty about debt and growth prospects among the 17-country eurozone’s weakest members.

The borrowing rates of Italy and other financially shaky countries like Spain had eased in recent months after the European Central Bank gave banks emergency loans and the government of Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti implemented austerity measures.

However, that lending program by the ECB expired at the end of March.

Commodities were mixed after demand concerns sent prices for oil and metals lower on Tuesday.

Copper prices stabilized and were unchanged at US$3.65 a pound. Prices for copper, which is viewed as an economic barometer as it is used in so many businesses, have tumbled about seven per cent in the past week amid soft Chinese economic data. But the base metals sector was ahead 2.2 per cent as Teck Resources (TSX:TCK.B) advanced 91 cents to C$35.71 and HudBay Minerals (TSX:HBM) climbed 22 cents to $10.49.

The industrials sector rose about 1.59 per cent as Canadian National Railways (TSX:CNR) climbed $1.17 to $77.22 while Canadian Pacific Railway (TSX:CP) improved by 89 cents to $74.15.

The May crude contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange gained $1.29 to US$102.31 a barrel and the energy sector climbed 1.42 per cent. Suncor Energy (TSX:SU) rose 51 cents to C$30.19 while Cenovus Energy (TSX:CVE) was up 57 cents to $33.95.

The gold sector was the only decliner, down 0.57 per cent even as gold shed early losses and was unchanged at US$1,660.70 an ounce. Barrick Gold Corp. (TSX:ABX) faded 22 cents to C$41.49 while Kinross Gold Corp. (TSX:K) shed 18 cents to $9.22.

Romania’s environment minister says an application by Gabriel Resources Ltd. (TSX:GBU) for permits to move ahead with a controversial gold mine can’t be speeded up as requested. Opponents say building the open-pit mine would damage ancient monuments and destroy a mountain face. Gabriel shares dipped nine cents to $3.16.

European markets were positive with London’s FTSE 100 index ahead 0.7 per cent, Frankfurt’s DAX up 1.16 per cent and the Paris CAC 40 ahead 0.75 per cent.

Earlier in Asia, Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 fell 0.8 per cent, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng dropped 1.1 per cent and Seoul’s Kospi edged 0.1 per cent lower, while the Shanghai Composite Index edged 0.1 per cent higher.

Markets will be closely watching for first-quarter gross domestic product results, starting with China on Friday. China lowered its GDP growth target last month to 7.5 per cent, sparking concern that the world’s second-largest economy is slowing faster than expected.

In Canadian earnings news, Astral Media Inc. (TSX:ACM.A) had a $38.2-million profit in its second quarter, a 10 per cent increase over the same period a year earlier. Revenue rose to $233.5 million from $232.7 million and its shares added a penny to $48.48.

Dollarama Inc. (TSX:DOL) says its net income soared 51 per cent to $63.6 million or 84 cents per diluted share in its fiscal fourth quarter, up from $42 million or 56 cents per share a year earlier. The discount chain’s sales jumped 14.7 per cent to $468.7 million. Its shares gained $3.80 to $52.16.

Austerity hits Italy's crumbling cultural heritage

Posted on 8th April 2012 in The monuments of world

After slashing arts budgets and with its most famous monuments badly in need of repair, Italy‘s government is increasingly looking to private investors to help it preserve a priceless cultural heritage.

The biggest initiative so far, however, is faltering after billionaire Diego Della Valle said he might pull his 25 million euros ($33 million) to restore the Colosseum following union protests and investigations into the project.

Fragments of the 2,000-year-old Roman amphitheatre — now at the centre of a busy road junction and blackened with pollution — have begun falling down and the restoration project’s start date of March is looking increasingly unlikely.

Meanwhile, at the archaeological site of Pompeii near Naples, which has also been hit by a series of alarming collapses in recent months, the long-mooted prospect of bringing in private investors is still a distant prospect.

The government has promised to unblock 105 million euros ($138 million) in funding from the European Union for a four-year maintenance plan and to increase the number of archaeologists at the site from just one person employed there currently.

“Italy’s entire heritage needs attention,” the National Association of Italian Archaeologists said in a recent appeal for greater resources.

Italy is not alone in its struggle to preserve its ruins.

In a move that left many Greeks and scholars aghast, Greece’s culture ministry said it would open up some of the debt-stricken country’s most-cherished archaeological sites, including the Acropolis, to advertising firms, movie companies and other ventures. The money generated would be spent on upkeep and monitoring of the sites.

Greek archaeologists are also finding it hard to get funding for licensed digs while antiquity smuggling is on the rise.

Italy is the fourth biggest tourism destination in the world after France, the United States and Spain, and is rightly proud of its cultural heritage — enriched by centuries of history from the Roman era to the Renaissance to the Baroque.

But its low growth and debt mountain of 1.9 trillion euros ($2.5 trillion) has spooked international investors and forced the government to implement three austerity budgets in under a year in a bid to rein in public finances.

Italy currently allocates just 0.21 percent of its gross domestic product to culture and the 1.8 billion euros ($2.4 billion) are often only good for patching up its many monuments, leaving little space for funding the living arts.

The internationally renowned La Scala opera house and Piccolo Teatro in Milan were forced to accept a cut of 17 million euros ($22.4 million) last year.

And a special fund that subsidises Italian theatres had a budget of 231 million euros ($304 million) in 2011 — 50 percent less than the previous year.

Cinema has also been badly affected, with an association of cinema and television workers this month saying the situation was “grave”.

Italian documentary maker Gustav Hofer said he had been forced to go abroad to look for financing. “There are just crumbs in Italy,” he said.

Camillo Esposito, the head of a small production company, agreed: “It’s hard to find financing and distribute a film that isn’t commercial.”

Author and professor Umberto Eco, a leading voice in the arts, recently wrote a scathing open letter to the government.

“Something isn’t working,” he wrote. “We haven’t learnt how to make money from our national culture.”

Windows Of The World

Posted on 3rd April 2012 in The monuments of world

What if you can visit about 120 different cultural landmarks and famous monuments from all over the country in one place? How absolutely convenient, amazing and fun that would be right? Well, Windows of the World at Shenzhen offers just that. But wait, there’s a twist. It’s all in miniature version. Miniature as in, a little smaller than the real ones but nevertheless still exudes a sense and feel of elegance and exquisiteness.

It is located in the western part of Shenzhen in the People’s Republic of China at Overseas Chinese Town along the beautiful Shenzhen bay covering an area of 480,000sqm. Window of the World is a tourist attraction or theme park with more than 120 reproductions of some of the world’s most well-known attractions such as the breathtaking Eiffel Tower, the famous Arc De Triomphe monument, the gladiator arena, the Rome Colosseum, the good luck fountain of Trevi Fountain, the picturesque Niagara Falls, the history rich Angkor Wat, the mysterious Pyramids of Egypt and Sphinx of Giza, the exquisite Taj Mahal, the giant Big Ben of London, the mind-boggling Leaning Tower of Pisa, the opera loving Sydney Opera House, and the ever popular figure of Statue of Liberty. There’s even a Jurassic Park theme area!

If you are feeling lackluster before arriving, the moment you step into the Window of the World and explore what it had to offer, one will simply be hype up and begins to feel the energy and life flowing into you. How could one not when surrounded by magnificent sculptures, landmarks and monuments around! Taking pictures will be the first thing that popped into all the excited minds and one does not even need to scratch the head to look for ideal places to take pictures. Almost anywhere, and everywhere can be a perfect post-card picture location. I kid you not! Since most of us (I believe) had never been to that many countries before, having all this popular tourist attractions under one roof, I mean one sky, is simply amazing, albeit at a cost of them being miniature in size.

Apart from discovering all these unique and interesting landmarks from different countries and taking a plethora of pictures to show off back home to envious friends, family members and relatives, the Window of the World also offers a variety of international restaurants serving cuisines ranging from French cuisine to Mexican delights to Italian pizzas right down to Chinese temptations. Whatever your taste buds craved at that particular moment, you can rest assured that one of the many restaurants there will satisfied your grumbling and demanding stomach and keep it satisfied. However, bear in mind that prices varies from top-end to really affordable mouth-watering food. Whatever your decision, always remember to calculate your budget well beforehand.

If you got bored or tired from walking around the theme park, there are entertainment shows available in the evening with shows such as “Fervorous Paris Nights” at “Caesar’s Palace” which feature dancers dancing to popular music. Feeling playful? Then you can even get to dressed in Japanese kimonos, take pictures in a Japanese background setting and visit the park around on a horse!

If you are feeling more adventurous and seek for some thrill and fun activities instead, fear not, there’s always skiing and snow tubing available at the ‘Alps Indoor Skiing’. Skiing in a subtropical city might sound a little far-fetched, but the Indoor Alpine Ski Run in Shenzhen Window of the World offers you four thousand square metres (about 6,200,012 square feet) of indoor piste to ski and it definitely is a one of a kind experience. Other thrillers include navigating the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon, playing with bows and arrows at the Archery Field or simply visit the park via cable car. Due to time constraint, we couldn’t join all the rides and entertainments that were offered.

The admission fee is 120 yuan, roughly around B$25 (or 50 yuan after 7.40pm). Those who are between the ages of 65 and 69 and whose heights are between 1.1 metres and 1.4 metres are charged half-price. Elderly over the age of 70 and those under the height of 1.1 metres gets to enter for free. To reach the Window of the World, one can use the Shenzhen Metro choosing Line 1 at Shijiezhichuang Station, which costs roughly around five yuan. One tip though. Remember to wear comfortable shoes such as sport shoes or sneakers. Definitely not slippers or high heels as the amount of walking you have to do will kill your feet.

After about four to five hours exploring and discovering the sights and sounds of the Window of the World and it should be enough for sightseeing and tonnes of picture taking moments. Unless of course, if you are highly enthusiastic or have time to kill, spending more time around is not that bad either. I mean why not, when and how often can you say, you have seen nearly what the entire world has to offer. Of course, it’s not the real thing but who cares! After visiting the Window of the World, you can’t help but wish the window at your bedroom offered the same kind of view as well.

Courtesy of Borneo Bulletin


Czech Bauhaus gem reopens after detailed renovation

Posted on 7th March 2012 in The monuments of world

The Tugendhat villa, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and a Bauhaus gem which suffered Nazi occupation and even a stint as a stable, has reopened its doors in the southern Czech city of Brno after a meticulous renovation.

Leading the early 20th-century “Modernist” revolution which ushered in simple clean lines in European architecture, the three-storey, flat-roofed villa is the work of legendary German architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1886-1969).

A guru of the celebrated Bauhaus school, Mies like his famous contemporaries in the United States or France, sought above all to accentuate architecture as an art.

“Tugendhat ranks among iconic residences, along with Frank Lloyd Wright’s Robie House in Chicago and Le Corbusier’s Savoy villa in Poissy (France),” said Iveta Cerna, director of the UNESCO-listed monument.

The doors of Tugendhat, built in 1929-30, opened to visitors last week after a two-year, $9.2 million (6.8 million euro) revamp supervised by an international commission of 17 experts from six countries.

“The renovation was carried out by a Czech company but under the supervision of the whole world,” said Brno mayor Roman Onderka.

Using materials like glass, steel and concrete, Mies eschewed the traditional concept of separate rooms for an airy, open-plan design which replaced walls with floor-to-ceiling windows, offering breathtaking views of the sprawling sloping garden and Brno’s historical monuments.

Rohe’s design principle of “less is more” saw him use the revolutionary iron framework allowing him to dispense with supporting walls.

He also designed all the furniture, including two types of armchairs crafted specially for the house: the Tugendhat and Brno chairs which are still in production, as well as switches, washbasins, bathtubs and taps.

The villa was shorn of paintings and decorations but was by no means austere due to the extensive use of exotic materials like a captivating honey-coloured onyx wall which is partly translucent and changes colour at dusk, and rare tropical woods.

“My parents absolutely identified themselves with this type of architecture, they loved the house,” said Daniela Hammer-Tugendhat, the daughter of the villa’s original owners.

“My father was convinced that the beauty and transparency of the architecture could shape the ethics of its residents, including the children raised here,” she added.

Fritz Tugendhat was a Jewish industrialist who owned several factories in Brno, about 200 kilometres (125 miles) southeast of Prague.

The city, known as the “Moravian Manchester” owing to its numerous textile plants prior to World War II, also boasted a large Jewish community at the time.

But Tugendhat and his wife Grete only enjoyed living in the villa for a brief period before being forced to flee Nazi German occupation in 1938. They moved first to Switzerland and then to Venezuela, where Hammer-Tugendhat was born.

“My parents lost not only their house, but also the closest family members murdered by the Nazis,” Hammer-Tugendhat told AFP.

As the war broke out, the villa’s fate was sealed. The Nazis confiscated it, converting it into a studio for the Messerschmitt aviation factory, while the Soviet Army later used it as a stable during the liberation of Czechoslovalia in 1948.

Under communism in 1955, the villa became the property of the Czechoslovak state, and it was converted into a rehabilitation centre for children, before another revamp in the 1980s.

The villa was the setting for key talks between the Czech and Slovak prime ministers, Vaclav Klaus and Vladimir Meciar, in 1992 in the run-up to the peaceful split of the former Czechoslovakia into two countries a year later.

UNESCO put the villa on its world heritage list in December 2001.

“The villa is also famous for exotic materials such as Moroccan onyx, Italian travertine, or palisander and Macassar ebony from the island of Celebes,” said Petr Dvorak, a guide at the villa.

Daniela Hammer-Tugendhat does not like the fact that the villa’s original furniture has been replaced with replicas, with original items owned by the family being put in storage.

“Time left marks on the original furniture. After everything that happened here, it’s strange for visitors to feel like nothing did,” she said.

But some of the original features were found nearby by chance like a curved wall fashioned out of Macassar ebony which was discovered in the dining hall of Brno’s law school, where it had been taken by the Nazis.

Gunmen raid museum at Ancient Olympia, as guards say cutbacks threaten Greek heritage

Posted on 17th February 2012 in The monuments of world

ATHENS, Greece – Two masked gunmen stormed into a small museum at the birthplace of the ancient Olympics in southern Greece on Friday, smashing display cases with hammers and making off with dozens of antiquities up to 3,200 years old, authorities said.

It was the second major museum theft in as many months in debt-crippled Greece, and a culture ministry unionist said spending cuts have compromised security at hundreds of museums and ancient sites across the country. With unemployment at 21 per cent and Greece’s economy in its fifth year of recession, crime, poverty and homeless rates also have been increasing.

Friday’s robbers targeted the museum of the ancient Games at Olympia, a few hundred yards (meters) away from the world heritage site’s main museum, which contains priceless statues and bronze artifacts excavated at the holiest sanctuary of ancient Greece.

Police said about 60 artifacts were stolen by the robbers, who tied up the only site guard, a 48-year-old woman.

Culture Minister Pavlos Geroulanos submitted his resignation after the morning robbery, but it was unclear whether it had been accepted by Prime Minister Lucas Papademos. Geroulanos travelled on Friday to ancient Olympia, some 210 miles (340 kilometres) southwest of Athens.

“This is a very sad day … a tragedy,” ministry Secretary-General Lina Mendoni said.

Police in Olympia and neighbouring areas set up roadblocks, while special investigators were rushed in from Athens.

“According to the results of the investigation so far, unknown persons, this morning, at about 07:34 a.m., immobilized the guard of the museum and removed bronze and clay objects from the displays, as well as a gold ring,” a police statement said.

A culture ministry official said the stolen antiquities dated from the 9th to the 4th centuries B.C., apart from the seal-ring which dates to Late Bronze Age Mycenaean times and was found in another part of southern Greece.

“They took small objects made of bronze and pottery — figurines, vases and lamps — and the ring,” the official said. “The artifacts were behind reinforced glass panels which fracture like a car windscreen, and the thieves grabbed whatever small objects they could reach through the holes they opened.”

A spokesman for museum guards urged emergency government action to protect historic sites and museums, warning that spending cuts taken to save the country from bankruptcy have eroded security.

“The cutbacks imposed by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund have hurt our cultural heritage, which is also the world’s heritage” said Yiannis Mavrikopoulos, head of the culture ministry museum and site guards’ union.

“There are no funds for new guard hirings,” he said. “There are 2,000 of us, and there should be 4,000, while many have been forced to take early retirement ahead of the new program of layoffs. We face terrible staff shortages. As a result, our monuments and sites don’t have optimum protection — even though guards are doing their very best to protect our heritage.

Officials said the robbers seemed to have poor information on the museum, asking the guard where they could get golden wreaths and a valuable stamp collection — which are not part of the display.

“They seem to have operated more as if they were carrying out a holdup” rather than a professional museum heist, the ministry official told the AP, speaking on condition of anonymity due to the ongoing investigation.

The ancient Olympics were the most important sporting festival in ancient Greece, held every four years and lasting up to five days. They started in 776 B.C. and lasted until A.D. 394 when Roman emperor Theodosius abolished the festival, deeming it pagan. The site hosted an Olympic event during the Athens 2004 Games, when the shot-put was held in the ancient stadium.

The flame for each modern Olympics is lit in a special ceremony at ancient Olympia — and the ceremony for the London Games will be held there on May 10.

Olympia Mayor Efthimios Kotzas urged authorities to improve security.

“The level of security is indeed lacking,” Kotzas told state-run NET television. “These are treasures. A piece of world heritage has been lost, thanks to these thieves. … I think (authorities) should have been more mindful and the security should have been more serious.”

Friday’s robbery is the second major museum theft in the past two months in Greece. In January, thieves made off with art works by 20th-century masters Pablo Picasso and Piet Mondrian from the National Gallery in one of the best-guarded areas of central Athens.

In that pre-dawn heist, the burglars also took a pen and ink drawing of a religious scene by Italian 16th-century painter Guglielmo Caccia. As they fled, thieves abandoned a fourth work by Mondrian. No arrests have been made.

Museum robbed at Greece's Ancient Olympia

Posted on 17th February 2012 in The monuments of world

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Two masked gunmen stormed into a small museum at the birthplace of the ancient Olympics in southern Greece on Friday, smashing display cases with hammers and making off with dozens of antiquities up to 3,200 years old, authorities said.

It was the second major museum theft in as many months in debt-crippled Greece, and a culture ministry unionist said spending cuts have compromised security at hundreds of museums and ancient sites across the country. With unemployment at 21 percent and Greece’s economy in its fifth year of recession, crime, poverty and homeless rates also have been increasing.

Friday’s robbers targeted the museum of the ancient Games at Olympia, a few hundred yards (meters) away from the world heritage site’s main museum, which contains priceless statues and bronze artifacts excavated at the holiest sanctuary of ancient Greece.

Police said about 60 artifacts were stolen by the robbers, who tied up the only site guard, a 48-year-old woman.

Culture Minister Pavlos Geroulanos submitted his resignation after the morning robbery, but it was unclear whether it had been accepted by Prime Minister Lucas Papademos. Geroulanos traveled on Friday to ancient Olympia, some 210 miles (340 kilometers) southwest of Athens.

“This is a very sad day … a tragedy,” ministry Secretary-General Lina Mendoni said.

Police in Olympia and neighboring areas set up roadblocks, while special investigators were rushed in from Athens.

“According to the results of the investigation so far, unknown persons, this morning, at about 07:34 a.m., immobilized the guard of the museum and removed bronze and clay objects from the displays, as well as a gold ring,” a police statement said.

A culture ministry official said the stolen antiquities dated from the 9th to the 4th centuries B.C., apart from the seal-ring which dates to Late Bronze Age Mycenaean times and was found in another part of southern Greece.

“They took small objects made of bronze and pottery — figurines, vases and lamps — and the ring,” the official said. “The artifacts were behind reinforced glass panels which fracture like a car windscreen, and the thieves grabbed whatever small objects they could reach through the holes they opened.”

A spokesman for museum guards urged emergency government action to protect historic sites and museums, warning that spending cuts taken to save the country from bankruptcy have eroded security.

“The cutbacks imposed by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund have hurt our cultural heritage, which is also the world’s heritage” said Yiannis Mavrikopoulos, head of the culture ministry museum and site guards’ union.

“There are no funds for new guard hirings,” he said. “There are 2,000 of us, and there should be 4,000, while many have been forced to take early retirement ahead of the new program of layoffs. We face terrible staff shortages. As a result, our monuments and sites don’t have optimum protection — even though guards are doing their very best to protect our heritage.

Officials said the robbers seemed to have poor information on the museum, asking the guard where they could get golden wreaths and a valuable stamp collection — which are not part of the display.

“They seem to have operated more as if they were carrying out a holdup” rather than a professional museum heist, the ministry official told the AP, speaking on condition of anonymity due to the ongoing investigation.

The ancient Olympics were the most important sporting festival in ancient Greece, held every four years and lasting up to five days. They started in 776 B.C. and lasted until A.D. 394 when Roman emperor Theodosius abolished the festival, deeming it pagan. The site hosted an Olympic event during the Athens 2004 Games, when the shot-put was held in the ancient stadium.

The flame for each modern Olympics is lit in a special ceremony at ancient Olympia — and the ceremony for the London Games will be held there on May 10.

Olympia Mayor Efthimios Kotzas urged authorities to improve security.

“The level of security is indeed lacking,” Kotzas told state-run NET television. “These are treasures. A piece of world heritage has been lost, thanks to these thieves. … I think (authorities) should have been more mindful and the security should have been more serious.”

Friday’s robbery is the second major museum theft in the past two months in Greece. In January, thieves made off with art works by 20th-century masters Pablo Picasso and Piet Mondrian from the National Gallery in one of the best-guarded areas of central Athens.

In that pre-dawn heist, the burglars also took a pen and ink drawing of a religious scene by Italian 16th-century painter Guglielmo Caccia. As they fled, thieves abandoned a fourth work by Mondrian. No arrests have been made.