Architecture

Thursday, 22 January 2026
13 facts about Palais Garnier
13 facts about Palais Garnier
Académie Nationale de Musique
The Opéra Garnier, officially known as the Palais Garnier, is an outstanding architectural work and symbolizes the golden age of opera and ballet in t ...

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Trevi Fountain
Money is regularly fished out of the fountain by municipal services.
It is used for charitable purposes and preserving the city's monuments.
Statue of Liberty
The cost of the construction was in the range of $400,000, which is now about $12 million.
Carrying out the construction was made possible by collections conducted in France and the United States.
Pompeii
The city was surrounded by a fortified wall about 3 km long.
Great Pyramid of Giza
The Great Gallery, a corridor 8.53 m high and 46.63 m long, led to the King's Chamber.
At the entrance to the Great Gallery there is a horizontal shaft leading to the descending corridor ...
White house
Its construction began with cornerstone installation at noon on 13th October 1792.
The localization was chosen by President George Washington and urban planner Pierre L’Enfant. The bu ...
Schönbrunn Palace
Napoleon Bonaparte’s only legitimate male descendant, known in Austria as Prince Reichstadt, died at Schönbrunn Palace.
The prince, who struggled with lung problems from an early age and eventually contracted tuberculosi ...
Forbidden City
To the south of the Forbidden City were two important temples.
These were: The Imperial Family Shrine (Imperial Ancestral Temple), where the emperor worshipped the ...
Pompeii
The city was covered with a nearly 6 m (20 ft) layer of volcanic ash.
On the city fell glowing stones (lapilli), causing fires. The clouds of poisonous gases killed all who remained in Pompeii. The so-called burning cloud had a temperature of up to 600 °C (1112 °F).
La Sagrada Familia
With the experience he gained, Gaudi began to experiment more with his designs.
He used the equilibrium rule of the catenary, creating a spatial model of a building and testing the ...
Great Wall of China
The Wall was not an impregnable structure.
In the 13th century, Mongol tribes under Genghis Khan managed to defeat the fortification and take control of northern and central China for nearly 100 years.