Buildings & Structures (basic)
Pro Football of Fame
() dedicated in 19__;
Taj Mahal
(Agra, India) ("Crown of the Palace") 240' palace built from 1631-1643 on the Jumna R. by Persia's Shah Jahan, when his favorite wife (Mumtaz Mahal) died in labor with their 14th child;
Christ of the Andes
(Argentina-Chile border) built in __ by ___; ___ tall; more?
Pentagon
(Arlington, VA) about 3.7 million square feet of office space; built in the 1940s to house the Dept. of the Army;
Forbidden City
(Beijing, China) former residence of the Emperor (built 1406-1420 by the 3rd Ming Emperor); Tiananmen Square is its Southern exit;
Hoover Dam
(Black Canyon, Colorado River) formerly called the Boulder Dam; bridges Arizona and Nevada;
Golden Gate Bridge
(California) opened in 19__; 746' tall at its highest point; spans the Golden gate, a channel separating San Francisco (S) and Marin (N) Counties;
Angkor Wat
(Cambodia) world's largest religious structure; originally built to honor Vishnu (Hindu), though currently Buddhist; more?
Fort Sumter
(Charleston, SC Harbor) April 12 attack by confederates began the Civil War; surrendered Apr. 13; only 6 confederate states at the time;
Willis Tower
(Chicago, 1974) built as the Sears Tower; renamed on July 16, 2009 after British insurance group bought the naming rights; it was the tallest building from its building until 1988, when the NYC World Trade Center was built; as of 2010, depending on whether you include rooftop towers, it is the world's #5 (w/o) or #7 (with) tallest building (1451', 442 m, 110 stories); it is 22 stories more but 33' shorter than the Petronas towers; designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill;
Three Gorges Dam
(China) on the Yangtze River; largest dam in the world; displaced ___ people; completed in ___; the reservoir took ___ years to fill;
Aswan High Dam
(El Saad al Aali, Egypt) located just south of the city of Aswan in Egypt; constructed (with Soviet aid) to regulate the yearly flood of the Nile & to create a water reservoir, later named Lake Nasser; construction lasted from 1960-1970;
Uffizi, the
(Florence, Italy) Art museum, arguably 2nd only to the Louvre;
Great Sphinx
(Giza, Egypt) built c. 2558-2532 BC by King Khafra (Khufu's son) and probably a likeness of him; located on the West Bank of the Nile, near Cairo; the largest monolith statue in the world;
Petronas Towers (2)
(Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia) 5th tallest building in world (1,483', 452 m, 88 stories); they are the tallest buildings in the world; completed in 1996; 33' taller than the Sears Tower; joined by a double deck skybridge at the 41st story;
London Bridge
(Lake Havasu City, AZ) constructed from 1176-1209 over the Thames, costing 150 lives; later moved to Arizona and replaced with a more modern version;
Westminster Abbey
(London) formerly the Abbey of St. Peter at Westminster; famous Brits buried here include Darwin & Newton (in the Nave); William Pitt; Dickens, G. Chaucer & Robert Browning (Poets Corner);
British Airways London Eye
(London) largest ferris wheel in the world; built in __;
Bolshoi
(Moscow) famous theater for opera and ballet; home to the world-famous Bolshoi opera and bellet companies; the current building was built on Theatre Square in 1824 to replace the Petrovka Theatre, which had been destroyed by fire in 1805;
Statue of Liberty
(NY) officially unveiled 10-28-1886 on Bedloe's Island; a gift from France; more?
Empire State Building
(NYC) after destruction of the Word Trade Center, it became the tallest building in NYC; 102 floors; the architect was William Lamb of Shreve, Lamb & Harmon Associates; construction lasted from 1930-____; located on the corner of 34th Street & 5th Avenue at 350 5th Ave, NY, NY 10118;
Guggenheim, (Solomon R.) Museum
(NYC) designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, and opened in 1959; known for its circular interior walkway;
Grand Central Terminal
(NYC) world's largest railroad terminal; often incorrectly called Grand Central Station; located at the intersection of 42nd Street & Park Ave;
Eiffel Tower
(Paris) 1st structure to surpass 300 meters in height; tallest structure in the world from 1889-1930; more?
Musee d'Orsay
(Paris) art museum with the world's largest collection of Impressionists; located on the left bank of the Seine, housed in the former railway station, the Gare d'Orsay; opened 1986;
Christ the Redeemer
(Rio de Janeiro) in 1920's, Brazil's churches pooled their money to build this 120' monument on a 2300' peak overlooking Rio;
Stonehenge
(Salisbury Plain, southern England) grouping of large stones surrounded by 56 aubrey holes;
Alamo
(San Antonio, TX) means "cottonwood" in what language??; f. by Franciscan monks in 1718 as San Antonio de Valero; more info?
Alcatraz
(San Francisco Bay) federal prison open from 1934-63;
Hermitage,the
(St. Petersburg, Russia) art museum; more?
Taipei 101
(Taiwan) built in 2004; tallest building in world until 2010 (1667', 508 m, 101 floors);
CN Tower
(Toronto) at 1815', it was the tallest self-supporting structure in the world from 1975-2007; built in ___ as a TV transmission tower;
Lincoln Memorial
(Washington, DC) dedicated May 30 1922; located on the West end of the National Mall; on the South corner, the Gettysburg Address is engraved in stone; the 36 columns represent the 36 states during Lincoln's term;
Alhambra
(name means Red in Arabic?) Moorish fortress in Granada, Spain; built in __ by ___ for ___;
London Underground
(the "Tube") when its 1st section opened in 1863, it was the 1st underground railway system in the world; world's longest subway system--244 miles (391 km) long;
Channel Tunnel (Chunnel)
opened in 1994; a 31-mile tunnel beneath the English Channel at the Strait of Dover, running between Folkestone (U.K.--near Dover) and Sangatte (France--near Calais);