Hello, my friend, hello again; today we come together to talk about 7 Fictional Towns You Can Visit in Real Life and hope the blog can help you.
Want to catch a little Tinseltown glamour—without actually going to Tinseltown? Plan a trip to one of these quirky faux hamlets, built as sets for film shoots that wrapped years ago. Touring these spots will take you to some fascinatingly out-of-the-way spots, from the desert in Tunisia to deep-woods North Carolina, and give you a little taste of movie magic.
Popeye's Village from Popeye
Also known as Sweethaven Village, this cluster of shaggy-dog cottages and other wooden buildings on the island of Malta was erected for the 1980 live action version of Popeye, starring Robin Williams. It is now open to tourists as a museum and entertainment center.
Located on private land but accessible if you’re there at the right time (and pay the owners $3), this street of crumbling styrofoam edifices sits just outside of Montgomery, Alabama. Director Tim Burton had the set finished in loving detail for his film, which starred Ewan McGregor and Albert Finney.
The easiest way to see the 44 “hobbit holes” that make up the Shire village of Hobbiton is to join one of the organized tours run out of Matamata, two hours south of Auckland in New Zealand. The Party Tree, the arched bridge, and Bilbo Baggin’s home are highlights of this permanent reconstruction of the original sets for the Peter Jackson trilogy.
A traditional Berber house in the Tunisian village of Matmata served as the Skywalker home in the George Lucas epic, and the other sites nearby stood in for the distant planet of Tatooine. Visitors can spot a few of the original Star Wars props and decor hanging here and there.
The deserted North Carolina mill town of Henry River (near the present-day town of Hildrebran) played the part of the forlorn coal-mining region District 12 in the first of the Hunger Games films. The spooky, abandoned neighborhood is posted with “No Trespassing” signs, but apparently fans of the movie have been touring it ever since shooting finished in 2011.
Scenes from the Disney series starring Johnny Depp were shot at the scenic Wallilabou Anchorage on the Caribbean island of St. Vincent. Tourists who make their way there can try on original costumes from the film and see the thatched-roof huts and a gallows and cannon used in the movie.
To film a proper Western, a director needs plenty of wide open space, and this working movie ranch outside of Santa Fe, New Mexico fits the bill. Outfitted with plenty of Old West buildings and a dusty Main Street, the ranch is not always open to the public, through music festivals and weddings sometimes take place there.
Workers cottages, once a staple of Chicago’s middle-class culture, came to define the character of its residential neighborhoods. Now they’re being demolished in the name of urban development. Can they be saved, or will they slip, one by one, into obscurity?
Hello, my friend, hello again; today we come together to talk about The Biltmore Estate: A Brief Architectural Tour and hope the blog can help you. I recently toured The Biltmore in Asheville, NC—a 250-room estate on 8,000 acres, the largest private home built in America. It is architecturally splendid, wildly romantic, and absurdly luxurious….
In desirable neighborhoods across the United States, the razing of a tear-down is a familiar sight. But this market-driven trend actually has a very long history. Consider this list of 15 eye-poppingly palatial homes, built with great care and at huge expense, that later fell victim to the wrecking ball.
Your visions of extra living space, another bathroom, or a second-floor addition can come to life with a home addition project supervised by a general contractor. The cost of a home addition ranges from $21,000 to $100,000, with a national average price of $48,860.
Buildings are more than just piles of bricks and mortar. Buildings tell stories and embody historical periods. Some even incite scandal and arouse controversy because they’re too bold or too boring, or maybe they just got caught up in a tangle of lawsuits. For whatever reason, these 12 buildings stirred up controversy, and one or two of them may surprise you!