70-floor-up slide is latest glass-bottom attraction
A glass-bottomed slide from the 70th to the 69th floors, with only a sheet of glass to ride on, will open in June on L.A.'s new U.S. Bank building.
A glass-bottomed slide from the 70th to the 69th floors, with only a sheet of glass to ride on, will open in June on L.A.'s new U.S. Bank building.
Vienna allows short-term rentals but requires licenses—and taxes. Authorities are cracking down now on those with neither or who owe taxes.
In historic Vicksburg, the Duff Green Mansion, host to both Jefferson Davis and Ulysses S. Grant, serves as both living history and a bed-and-breakfast.
Salvaged from the razing of buildings at the City College of New York, these gothic grotesques wait on a lawn near the School of Architecture.
A small village in the mountains above Lake Maggiore traces its roots to Scottish mercenaries who wintered there in 1525 and never went home.
Anchorage has something to really brag about! Can you believe their busy airport never closes for bad weather?
Food, film, kites, bicycles and even bulls highlight March events in France. Some are traditional, some are new.
Camels are a common sight in Rajasthan, India. We came upon these two camel herders while on a ride.
A walk down the Champs-Elysées, Paris is a memorable experience.
Frontier Airlines puts big animal pictures on the tails of its planes. Now they invite you to vote for your favorite school or college mascot to go on a new one.
Boeing designs self- cleaning bathroom
A team of British archeologists is using crowdfunding to finance an excavation in a Spanish Iron Age hill fort, and to recruit willing diggers.
Beyond its beautiful painted houses, cobbled streets and stunning architecture, Copenhagen canals are a great way to see the city in another light.
Some images from the Madeira Wine Company in Funchal, Madeira
Royal Caribbean, which has recently had to cancel or shorten some cruises, is now imposing stricter rules on customers who want to cancel bookings.