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This article comes from Atlas Obscura’s Places newsletter. Subscribe or manage your subscription here.
In Shiodome, Tokyo, a hulking, storybook contraption clings to the side of the Nittele Tower at Nippon Television’s headquarters: the Giant Ghibli Clock. Designed by legendary animator Hayao Miyazaki, it’s less a timepiece than a mini mechanical theater—gears, doors, figures, and little surprises that feel like they’ve wandered out of a fantastical workshop and onto a city skyscraper. No need to buy a ticket: commuters can just look up and catch a burst of whimsy in the middle of a very modern district.
According to legend, the creator of this 14th-century astronomical clock in Prague was blinded to prevent him from making another. A nearly identical, and equally apocryphal, tale is told of another gorgeous clock in Poland. The sides of the Zimmer Tower in Belgium show the four stages of life, each featuring a different person or character. And in Paris, a unique mechanized clock displays a man fighting off a dragon, crab, and rooster.

Before we were able to tell time by glancing at our wrists, reaching into our pockets, or calling out to Siri, the local clock tower was how many people marked their days. Because they were highly visible civic resources, many clock towers saw a remarkable level of craftsmanship and attention to detail. SEE THE FULL LIST

Carved scenes of sex work and unglamorous labor complicate a heroic statue in Hamburg dedicated to the writer Hans Albers.

An unusual cast-iron bridge in Nantwich, England carries a historic canal across a busy main road.

This family-run collection in Cambodia known as the Vimean Sokha Museum holds tons of antique electronics, cameras, and motorbikes.
Centuries ago, astronomical clocks were the ultimate statement in horological prowess. During the heyday of grand astronomical clocks, between the 14th and 16th centuries in Europe, these massive constructions were often decorated as ornate pieces of art featuring multiple faces, moving figures, carved ornamentation, and intricately displayed figures.
The Most Beautiful Way to Track Time




Today we’re spotlighting a collection of recently finished striking sweaters from Ravelers featuring fearless color, bold graphic motifs, and altogether joyful visual impact. If you’ve been craving color confidence and plenty of yarny personality, you're in the right place!



Julia50's Ranunculus in Gilliatt, tangledstarlight's Eva D’Espanya, lilahula's Beeren‑Relief: dunkles Fuchsia, klare Struktur, viel Herz
Vivid solids yarns make for garments with stunning personality!



ImTwistedRibKnits's Blooming Bomber Jacket, Differentcraftz's 28th Birthday Heart Sweater, and Plaidpolly's Iszoni
These sweaters, paired with their eye-catching backgrounds, shine with playful style.



MAIKAFAM's BOSCO, aeneakeren's Trouty glow crew, EdibleThoughts's Harvest Flower Sweater
Large graphic motifs, full of charm, are expressive and cozy all at once.
We hope these projects leave you feeling inspired to reach for your brightest skeins and create something that makes your heart happy.

This route that used to be the same taken by Houston’s first electrified streetcar system that would take the Heights neighborhood residents to the "big city"( until the 1940's), now for about two miles in between the northbound and southbound lanes on Heights Blvd shows you a world of wonder.
Every half mile or so you will be greeted with an open-air exhibit of works from various Texas sculptors. Everything from giant blue cell phones, paper airplanes, Savoy cabbages, spheres made from hubcaps, and stacked sofas have been displayed.
The sculptures change after every 9 months or so and are for sale. It is common to see formerly displayed ones outside of many homes and businesses in the Heights area.

On September 29, 1991, during the Siege of Bjelovar Barracks, the "Bedenik" ammunition depot was detonated by Major Milan Tepić of the Yugoslav People's Army, who chose to blow up the facility rather than surrender it to Croatian forces. The resulting blast was so powerful it shook the entire city of Bjelovar and left a massive crater where the warehouse once stood. Eleven Croatian soldiers lost their lives in the explosion while trying to prevent the catastrophe.
Today, the site has been transformed into a peaceful memorial area. Visitors can walk through the forest paths to see the monument dedicated to the fallen defenders, a chapel, and an open-air museum featuring military equipment, including tanks and armored vehicles used during the war. It serves as a stark reminder of the "Bjelovar War" and the high price paid for the city's freedom.

This is a great example of Bulgaria's Orthodox heritage. From the outside this place looks quite plain (apart form the gilded domes and crosses on the roof). But step inside and you will be awed by the stunning frescoes that cover every inch of the walls and ceilings. Large chandeliers hang from the arched ceilings.
The domes apparently represent Christ and the writers of the four gospels, with the central one rising above the others.
If you like history, architecture or just want a peaceful place to sit, this is it.
Be careful on the marble floor though, there are a team of cleaners constantly mopping it.
I have been traveling my entire life. As a journalist, I've reported from places most people never see, like small towns in Malaysia and factory complexes in Tijuana. As a traveler, I've chased the unusual, the overlooked, the wonderful, and the natural around the world. I run marathons and rock climb, so discomfort in the name of discovery is basically my love language. And yet, until this past December, I had never once asked myself a simple question: how many of the fifty United States have I actually been to?
The answer came courtesy of Atlas Obscura, the travel and culture company I lead as CEO. We launched a new feature — a 50-state map where users can log the states they've visited. I sat down one evening, started clicking, and felt something unexpected: genuine suspense. When I finished, the number staring back at me was 39.
Thirty-nine states. Not bad. But also: eleven gaps. Eleven places I had somehow — through decades of movement and curiosity — never set foot in. And then I did the math: America's 250th birthday is July 4, 2026. That gave me a deadline. Suddenly, 39 felt less like an accomplishment and less like a finish line ... and more like a starting gun.
I wasn't alone in this feeling. Atlas Obscura recently partnered with YouGov to survey roughly 1,285 American adults about their travel habits and relationship to the fifty states. About 29 percent of Americans say visiting all fifty states is a lifetime goal. But only 4% have made it to 40 or more. I am going to be in rare company — and yet, paradoxically, that made the remaining eleven feel more urgent, not less. The survey also found that 53% of Americans have visited 10 or more states, which means nearly half the country hasn't even crossed that threshold. We are, it turns out, a nation of people who haven't fully seen our own nation.
The more I work at a travel company whose entire purpose is to show people the wonders hiding in plain sight, the more it seems to me that we should all lean more into exploration afar but also exploration at home.
Here is where the intellectual stakes come from for me. I majored in American Studies in college — specifically the counter-cultural strain of American History, the version that asks hard questions about who gets remembered and who gets erased, whose stories get told and whose don't. I became a journalist because I believe, at a cellular level, that there is no substitute for going somewhere in person. You cannot understand a place from a dateline. You cannot understand Americans — their humor, their grief, their contradictions, their resilience — without standing in their actual geography.
John Steinbeck wrote in Travels with Charley that he had discovered he did not know his own country. He was in his late fifties when he made that admission and set out to fix it. I find myself in a similar reckoning. I lead an American content company, a travel content company, one whose editorial mission is built on the idea that every place holds something astonishing. It would be a strange thing to have gaps in my own map.
So is this a patriotic exercise? That's a more complicated question than it sounds. The 250th anniversary — the Semiquincentennial, if you want to be formal about it — has become contested territory. For some, it's a moment of pride; for others, a prompt to ask harder questions about what exactly we're celebrating. But I’m taking a third path that cuts through this kind of false binary we find ourselves in: I am choosing to see more of the country, so that I can know our country and our people better.
And here is where Atlas Obscura shapes the mission entirely. I am not going to close out my eleven states by hitting the most obvious landmarks. That's not how I travel, and it's not what Atlas Obscura is about. Our research with YouGov found that 34% of Americans who travel to new states are most drawn to scenery and nature, and, while they're there, 68% say exploring local food is a top priority. The AO traveler hits the trails, eats the food, and goes further — past the familiar, toward the genuinely strange and wonderful.
So when I get to Bentonville, Arkansas, I'm definitely going to Crystal Bridges (though that museum — a world-class art institution dropped improbably into the Ozarks — is itself a kind of miracle), but I’m also going to The Bachman-Wilson House — a Frank Lloyd Wright home that was literally picked up and moved from New Jersey to the Crystal Bridges campus to save it from flooding. In Kansas, I’m going to Wamego, and, not only will I visit the Wizard of Oz Museum, I will also go to see the decommissioned nuclear missile silo that was the nexus of a drug operation that, by DEA estimates, accounted for 90% of America's LSD supply in the late 1990s. As someone who studied the American counter-culture in college, I feel almost obligated.
And in Bloomington, Indiana, I want to visit the Tibetan Mongolian Buddhist Cultural Center, founded by the Dalai Lama's brother, sitting quietly in the middle of the Indiana limestone belt — the kind of juxtaposition that makes you love this country's capacity for surprise.
Oh and I am definitely going to get myself to Carhenge, in Alliance, Nebraska — a full-scale replica of Stonehenge built from vintage American automobiles, painted gray, standing in the high plains. It is absurd. It is magnificent. It is exactly the kind of thing that makes me proud to work at Atlas Obscura.
Alexis de Tocqueville came to America in 1831 and spent nine months traversing it before writing one of the most perceptive analyses of American democracy ever produced. He understood that you had to move through a place to understand it. I have four months left and eleven states. The deadline is July 4th. The quest is on.
I invite any suggestions in the states I have ahead of me: Arkansas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, South Dakota, Wisconsin, Indiana, Idaho, Washington, Alaska. Email me at ceo@atlasobscura.com

Tucked along Birmingham’s Richard Arrington Jr. Boulevard, Books, Beans, and Candles isn’t just a store—it’s a portal. Billing itself as Alabama’s oldest and largest metaphysical shoppe, the space hums with the scent of incense and espresso, its shelves lined with arcane books, hand-poured candles, and curious relics of the occult. Visitors come to browse spellcraft supplies and crystals, sip tea or coffee, and linger among artifacts that seem to blur the line between the earthly and the ethereal.
But this shop is as much a gathering ground as it is a marketplace. On any given evening, you might find tarot readers flipping cards over steaming mugs during the monthly Tea and Tarot, or astrologers mapping the cosmos at Sips and Stars. Workshops on pagan traditions and esoteric practices draw locals and travelers alike, turning the space into a living, breathing salon for Birmingham’s mystical community—a place where curiosity meets the cosmos, one candle flame at a time.

Hultanäs railway station in Vetlanda municipality is a historic station on the Växjö-Åseda-Hultsfred narrow-gauge railway. It is no longer in regular service and is primarily used for tourist trains, such as the narrow-gauge steam trains of the museum railway.
The platform lies silent, as if time has decided to halt here. The gravel between the rails is overgrown with weeds and grass. The signs, their letters faded by sun and rain. On the tracks, the trains stand motionless, like metal skeletons waiting for a signal that will never come.
The windows are dull, some shattered. The locomotives still bear their numbers and logos. Inside, the cabins are empty: levers rusted, meters frozen in their last position. The seats are torn, the foam sticking out, and the floor is littered with leaves blown in through broken doors.
The carriages behind them tell their own stories. Seats are tilted or toppled, luggage racks hang loose, as if the trains, weary from years of running, have been placed here to finally rest, together on the same track, listening to the wind whistle along their empty corridors.
This article comes from Atlas Obscura’s Places newsletter. Subscribe or manage your subscription here.
On Bourbon Street in New Orleans, Jean Lafitte’s Old Absinthe House looks and feels like it belongs to another century. Andrew Jackson is said to have met the pirate Jean Lafitte in an upstairs room to ask for help manning ships against the British in the War of 1812. Today, the brick interior is lined with mementos left behind by visitors, its convivial history made visible.
The smallest bar in Amsterdam has stayed in one family since 1798, cramming centuries of coziness into a famously tiny room. An old-world Spanish eatery in Madrid is billed as the oldest restaurant in the world, and is still celebrated for its suckling pig. Some say this 19th-century Mexican cantina is the birthplace of the margarita. A storied Baltimore bar claims to have served Edgar Allan Poe his final drink.

Some stories of the past are told on restaurant plates and in Grandma’s cookie recipe. For anyone seeking to understand another generation and another era, food and drink can be powerful tools. From a Civil Rights-era restaurant that sustained activists to a candy shop reviving nostalgic treats to an English pub from the 12th century, these places offer delicious lessons in history. SEE THE LIST

This statue, known as “Los Lagartos,” commemorates a live alligator pond that was once in this El Paso plaza.

The Cave Creek Tubercular Cabin in Arizona is a rare remnant of a bygone era of medical treatment, when tuberculosis patients were isolated at sanatariums.

The Hull Lifesaving Museum was once the home base for shipwreck rescues in Boston Harbor.
Deep in Switzerland’s Val-de-Travers—absinthe’s birthplace—devotees keep the “green fairy” tradition alive by stashing bottles in the forest for fellow hikers to find and share. It’s part folklore, part scavenger hunt.
The Absinthe Enthusiasts Hiding Bottles in the Swiss Woods

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Doctor Who Magazine, issue 627 is released today
In this issue
Brave heart! An in-depth chat with JANET FIELDING who played the irrepressible Tegan opposite the Fourth and Fifth Doctors.
ALEX KINGSTON talks about playing River Song alongside the Tenth, Eleventh and Twelfth Doctors, as well as her on-going audio adventures with Big Finish, and her new book Stormcage.
Meet MILES TAYLOR, who is assuming the role of the Eleventh Doctor in a new range of audio dramas!
Monster actor RICHARD PRICE shares his memories of playing Cybermen, a Sea Devil and a Scaly Man!
40 Years of Fundraising! Looking back at the incredible artistry and charitable work of the Hyde fundraisers – including their contribution to last year’s season finale.
We examine the forbidden text of the Veritas, in our FACT OF FICTION feature on the mind-bending Twelfth Doctor episode Extremis.
Top Trumps! A stat-busting guide to Doctor Who editions of the popular card game.
Back to 1985… Blake’s 7’s Paul Darrow joins the cast of Doctor Who…
We assess the battle plans of the various factions in Remembrance of the Daleks.
The inner workings of the Dalek City on Skaro explored!
The Fifteenth Doctor and Mel learn more about the Daleks’ plans, in the latest instalment of Corruption of the Daleks…
Regular features
GALLIFREY GUARDIAN: the latest news including the 4K Ultra HD release of the Paul McGann TV movie.
Reviews – including the latest audio releases, books and action figures.
Other Worlds – the essential guide to new stories in Doctor Who’s expanded universe – featuring a chat with ANNEKE WILLS who played companion Polly.
Prizes to be won – including the new Season 21 Limited Edition Blu-ray boxset!
Doctor Who Magazine Issue 627 is on sale Thursday 5 March 2026 from panini.co.uk and TG Jones priced £7.99 (UK).
Also available as a digital edition from pocketmags.com priced £6.99.