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Saturday, November 23, 2024
CEOWORLD magazine - Latest - CEO Briefing - Top 5 Human-Made Underground Sights

CEO Briefing

Top 5 Human-Made Underground Sights

Underground sights underneath Earth give a special note of mystery to every visitor who will be there. Hidden passages, roads, ancient tunnels, underground cave cities, and old paths are all part of the game. Some are natural wonders, and others are human creations; today, we will unravel the second category. Underground attractions are ready to welcome us, so get ready and follow my footsteps to the most exciting finds in the bowels of the Earth.

  1. Churchill War Rooms, London, UK. Kingdom 

    Our journey to the underground wonders of the world begins in the metropolis of the world, the famous London. Below the streets of London is the beastly Cabinet Museum or Churchill War Rooms, dedicated to the life of British Prime Minister Churchill. History was written in these underground “rooms.”
    Here the British command plotted the Allied route to victory during World War II. Every corner has a story of its own to tell. Walk through the top-secret underground corridors. Learn about Churchill’s remarkable ninety-year life, from childhood to military career. The impressive world with its underground attractions has just begun.

  2. Parisian Catacombs, Paris, FranceAs you cross the famous Notre Dame de Paris and the Eiffel Tower, the Parisian air thrills you until you reach the steps that will lead you to another world. Welcome to the catacombs of the French capital. This is another hot spot in the city of Light, which has its honor on the list of underground attractions. Discover the underground ossicles, which hold the remains of more than six million people.
    They are in a small section of a tunnel network that joined the ancient quarries of Paris. The catacombs form a network of two hundred miles extending south from the former city gate or, as the French call it, Barriere d’Enfer (hell’s Gate). The catacombs are full of caves, tunnels, quarries, skulls, and bones of the dead. It sounds macabre, but simultaneously, it is a fantastic experience that every “real traveler” has to live in Paris.
  3. Slate Mine, North Wales, UKIt may sound funny, but three trampolines are on the list of underground attractions that magnetize every visitor. The world’s largest trampoline site is in the Earth’s bowels in North Wales. Discover them inside a cave twice as large as St Paul’s Cathedral in London. The cave named Llechwedd Slate was a Victorian slate mine. Access is by train, and if you decide to go, you should better not be afraid of heights.
  4. Transylvania Theme Park, RomaniaMany of us have visited theme parks around the world, like Disneyland. But who could have imagined a whole world of fun under the Earth? The deepest underground theme park in the world is in Transylvania, Romania, at the former ancient Salina Turda salt mines. One hundred twenty-two meters below the Earth is enough to enter the list of the most impressive underground attractions in the world.
    Get ready to discover the history of salt, climb a mill-Ferris wheel like in an amusement park, play mini-golf, basketball, bowling, and table tennis on the specially designed underground courts, take pictures, and take a boat in the cave with stalactites and stalagmites and have fun inside a different theme park.
  5. Stockholm Metro Gallery, SwedenFrom the list of underground attractions around the world, the Stockholm metro could not be missing. This metro is considered the most beautiful and the cleanest in Europe. At the same time, it has been described by locals and travelers as the largest open gallery in the world. When you are in Stockholm, get lost in the stations and have a stop at each station. Get lost in volcanic rocks to space planets.
    Each station is decorated with old and modern works of art created by more than 150 creators. The Stockholm Metro has around 100 stations, 47 of which are underground. It has seven lines with different colors symbolizing their age. Green stations were inaugurated in 1950, the red line started in 1964, while the newer blue stations operated in 1974 and are at the deepest point below the Swedish capital. Undoubtedly, the Stockholm Metro will enchant every traveler when they visit it.

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CEOWORLD magazine - Latest - CEO Briefing - Top 5 Human-Made Underground Sights
Anna Siampani
Anna Siampani, Lifestyle Editorial Director at the CEOWORLD magazine, working with reporters covering the luxury travel, high-end fashion, hospitality, and lifestyle industries. As lifestyle editorial director, Anna oversees CEOWORLD magazine's daily digital editorial operations, editing and writing features, essays, news, and other content, in addition to editing the magazine's cover stories, astrology pages, and more. You can reach Anna by mail at anna@ceoworld.biz