Gumbo’s Pic of the Day, Feb. 26, 2014: A Memory of Les Halles
Tucked into a side chapel of St. Eustache church in Paris, this statue by Raymond Mason commemorates “The Departure of the Fruits and Vegetables from the Heart of Paris, Feb. 28, 1969.”
Tucked into a side chapel of St. Eustache church in Paris, this statue by Raymond Mason commemorates “The Departure of the Fruits and Vegetables from the Heart of Paris, Feb. 28, 1969.”
Wat Pho is the Temple of the Reclining Buddha statue in Bangkok, adjoining the Grand Palace in Phra Nakhon district. This statue generally is thought to represent the dying Buddha, about to attain Nirvana.
Every place wants to be the “most important,” “most popular,” “most famous,” “most beautiful.” It can’t all be true—but there’s no doubt in my mind our visit today to the Great Mosque-Cathedral of Cordoba, also called the Mezquita, took us to one of the “most unusual.”
As a visitor to Naples, Italy and the surrounding countryside, it’s hard to disregard the presence of Mt. Vesuvius looming everywhere one goes. For example, should one forget for a moment, we have only to step onto the…
Jerez is known to most people for its namesake wine—sherry—or as a center for Flamenco, but it has another less well-known attraction, its alcazar, originally a Moorish fort and military residence, then the seat of Christian mayors,…
Tacoma is a city I’ve driven through numerous times but never thought much about. I was aware it was a port city situated on Puget Sound, and that it had a huge dome (Tacoma Dome) just off the I-5 freeway. I knew Tacoma is…
Sintra is a town that’s had two “Golden Ages,” nearly a thousand years apart. They have left Sintra with so many things to visit that it is not only one of Portugal’s biggest tourist attractions but also a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Starting…
Tucked into a side chapel of St. Eustache church in Paris, this statue by Raymond Mason commemorates “The Departure of the Fruits and Vegetables from the Heart of Paris, Feb. 28, 1969.
A massive metalic work of art that opens and closes, as any flower would, in response to daylight
Great Hall of the National Building Museum, in the historic Pension Building. I first visited this museum to see an exhibit on the development of urban transportation—with no hint what the building itself would look like. It took my…
Tucked into a side chapel of St. Eustache church in Paris, this statue by Raymond Mason commemorates “The Departure of the Fruits and Vegetables from the Heart of Paris, Feb. 28, 1969.”
Wat Pho is the Temple of the Reclining Buddha statue in Bangkok, adjoining the Grand Palace in Phra Nakhon district. This statue generally is thought to represent the dying Buddha, about to attain Nirvana.
Every place wants to be the “most important,” “most popular,” “most famous,” “most beautiful.” It can’t all be true—but there’s no doubt in my mind our visit today to the Great Mosque-Cathedral of Cordoba, also called the Mezquita, took us to one of the “most unusual.”
As a visitor to Naples, Italy and the surrounding countryside, it’s hard to disregard the presence of Mt. Vesuvius looming everywhere one goes. For example, should one forget for a moment, we have only to step onto the…
Jerez is known to most people for its namesake wine—sherry—or as a center for Flamenco, but it has another less well-known attraction, its alcazar, originally a Moorish fort and military residence, then the seat of Christian mayors,…
Tacoma is a city I’ve driven through numerous times but never thought much about. I was aware it was a port city situated on Puget Sound, and that it had a huge dome (Tacoma Dome) just off the I-5 freeway. I knew Tacoma is…
Sintra is a town that’s had two “Golden Ages,” nearly a thousand years apart. They have left Sintra with so many things to visit that it is not only one of Portugal’s biggest tourist attractions but also a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Starting…
Tucked into a side chapel of St. Eustache church in Paris, this statue by Raymond Mason commemorates “The Departure of the Fruits and Vegetables from the Heart of Paris, Feb. 28, 1969.
A massive metalic work of art that opens and closes, as any flower would, in response to daylight
Great Hall of the National Building Museum, in the historic Pension Building. I first visited this museum to see an exhibit on the development of urban transportation—with no hint what the building itself would look like. It took my…