Modern structures are subject to the same risks as aging structures, including neglect, inappropriate renovation, the effects of climate change and even demolition, but additional risks arise from the very qualities that make them modern: innovative technologies, experimental materials, and novel design.
However, public apathy, the lack of understanding that buildings of our own time can be important enough to be kept for the future, or that modern buildings might need the same care as older structures, may be the greatest challenge.
Established in 2008, the World Monuments Fund / Knoll Modernism Prize is awarded bi-annually to an innovative architectural or design solution that has preserved or enhanced a modern landmark or group of landmarks
The first of its kind, the award acknowledges the growing threats—neglect, deterioration, or even demolition—now facing significant works of modernism, and recognizes the architects and designers who help ensure their rejuvenation and long-term survival. Its purpose is to raise public awareness of the influential role modernism plays in our architectural heritage, and recognize modern buildings as sustainable structures with vital futures.
The prize is awarded in recognition of completed (built) work, and may be awarded for an individual project or a body of work. The award consists of $10,000 and a limited-edition Mies van der Rohe–designed Barcelona chair, created by Knoll in honor of the award. The prize is awarded to the designer, architect, or firm responsible for the work.
An independent jury comprising professionals from the fields of architecture, architectural conservation, journalism, and related fields selects the winner. The jury is chaired by Barry Bergdoll, the Philip Johnson Chief Curator of Architecture & Design at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY.
For over 70 years, Knoll has used modern design to connect people with their work, their lives, and their world. Our founders, Hans and Florence Knoll, embraced the creative genius of the Cranbrook Academy of Art and the Bauhaus School to create new types of furniture for the workplace and home. Their approach, where craftsmanship joined with technology through the use of design, anchors our perspective and shapes the values we endeavor to live by today.
As part of our effort to contribute to the communities where we do business, we are proud to be the sponsor of Modernism at Risk: Modern Solutions for Modern Landmarks. We recognize that Modernist masterpieces—cornerstones of our cultural landscape—are routinely being demolished, disfigured, or abandoned, and we hope this book and exhibition will contribute to raising awareness among students and design professionals about the role architects and designers can play in the preservation of this important part of our architectural legacy.
Andrew B. Cogan
CEO, Knoll, Inc.
Modernism represents the defining movement of twentieth-century architecture and design; yet, every day, important works of modern architecture are destroyed or inappropriately altered. The solutions for protecting them can be as individual as the threats that endanger them. These threats range from physical deterioration to perceived economic or functional obsolescence to public apathy. Often, the greatest challenges to saving modern buildings can be the innovative design and technical features that help define them as significant achievements in the history of architecture.
While there is no single response that can prevent the loss of every endangered modern site, the architects and designers working today play an increasingly critical role in demonstrating that these buildings can be economically and functionally viable and continue to serve useful purposes as places to live, work, learn, gather, and worship. The advocacy role of good design becomes increasingly important as the building materials and systems of many modern structures that stem from the classical period of modernism through the postwar boom reach the end of their physical life span. Saving modern landmarks is important because they enrich a community’s sense of place – providing continuity between its past and important buildings of our own times.
Modernism at Risk
WMF’s Modernism at Risk Initiative, launched in 2006 with founding sponsor Knoll, addresses the distinct threats facing great works of modern architecture around the world through advocacy, conservation, and public education.
“We associate Modernism of the late 1920s with gleaming whiteness,” says Barry Bergdoll, Museum of Modern Art architecture and design curator. “This is not architecture that looks particularly good in a ruinous state.”
Bergdoll hopes that the WMF prize can help systematize efforts in regards to researching, rebuilding, expanding, and reusing these structures. Yet, he notes, each project will present its own challenges. “Preservation is like English case law,” he says. “You’re following guidelines, but there are always decisions to be made.”
While the program directly supports conservation projects and operates a traveling exhibition for architecture students, “the prize is geared toward a professional audience as well as the public at large, so they can see that restoration is an alternative to demolition,” says WMF president and CEO Bonnie Burnham.
World Monuments Fund began preserving modern sites in the 1980s, when it helped restore seminal modern Mexican murals following a devastating earthquake. Later, it led the restoration of Brancusi’s Endless Column in Romania and the battle to save Edward Durell Stone’s A. Conger Goodyear House on Long Island.
Since its launch in 1996, the World Monuments Watch program has included more than thirty modern buildings, including the Rusakov Club (Konstantin Melnikov), Viipuri Library (Alvar Aalto), Tugendhat Villa (Ludwig Mies van der Rohe), the International Fairground at Tripoli (Oscar Niemeyer), the Ennis-Brown House (Frank Lloyd Wright), Florida Southern College (Frank Lloyd Wright), Taliesin and Taliesin West (Frank Lloyd Wright), the Schindler Kings Road House (Rudolf Michael Schindler), Grosse Pointe Memorial Library (Marcel Breuer), New York State Pavilion (Philip Johnson and Richard Foster), Riverview High School (Paul Rudolph), and the Orange County Government Center (Paul Rudolph).
The launch of the WMF/Knoll Modernism Prize in 2008 has brought more attention to the program, and thus to the cause of preserving modern architecture. Every two years, when the prize is awarded, the buildings and the architects who preserved them demonstrate that the architecture of the recent past is important and worthy of preservation.
For buildings facing demolition, the Initiative supports the development of design solutions that present alternatives to preserve the buildings and adapt them to new or expanded uses. This advocacy is intended to bolster community efforts already taking place.
5 x Case Studies: Modernism at Risk
The five case studies presented in the Modernism at Risk: Modern Solutions for Saving Modern Landmarks exhibition and this accompanying publication demonstrate that design practitioners and students, armed with their knowledge of 20th-century architecture and their critical thinking and problem-solving skills and supported by organizations like the World Monuments Fund, are helping devise multifaceted solutions—including advocacy efforts, technical plans, and otherwise—that address the distinct challenges to preserving modern architecture.
The buildings presented represent the rise of modernism from its early development during the interwar years in Europe (1930 ADGB Trade Union School, Bernau, Germany, by Hannes Meyer and Hans Wittwer) to its appearance in the United States and other countries (1939 A. Conger Goodyear House, Old Westbury, New York by Edward Durell Stone) to its proliferation during America’s postwar boom and later, often in the form of everyday civic buildings (1954 Grosse Pointe Public Library, Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan, by Marcel Breuer; 1958 Riverview High School, Riverview, Florida, by Paul Rudolph; and 1972 Kent Memorial Library, Suffield, Connecticut, by Warren Platner.)
Prior to its destruction in June 2011, the Phillis Wheatley Elementary School served the historic New Orleans African-American neighborhood of Tremé since it opened in 1955.
Celebrated worldwide for its innovative, regionally-expressive modern design – the structure had sustained moderate damage during the storms and levee breach of 2005. DOCOMOMO Louisiana advocated for its restoration via adaptive reuse.
WMF’s concern for modern sites began in the 1980s, but the establishment of WMF’s Modernism at Risk Initiative, launched in 2006 with founding sponsor Knoll, allows WMF to take a more active role in addressing the distinct threats facing great works of modern architecture around the world.
- For buildings facing demolition, the Initiative supports the development of design solutions that present alternatives to preserve the buildings and adapt them to new or expanded uses. This advocacy is intended to bolster community efforts already taking place.
- The survival of some modern buildings can be threatened by the technical challenges of conserving experimental materials and innovative building systems used in their design. The Initiative funds select conservation projects at internationally significant and endangered modern sites.
- To address the larger issue of public awareness about preserving modern architecture, the Initiative will develop an exhibition and lecture program in cooperation with museums and educational institutions.
Despite modernism’s influential place in the canon of architectural history, many significant modern buildings are endangered because of neglect, perceived obsolescence, inappropriate renovation, the threat of demolition, and public apathy.
In 2006, with support from Knoll, WMF launched Modernism at Risk, an advocacy and conservation program intended to bring international attention and resources to address the key threats and challenges facing many modern buildings, as well as the technical problems associated with conserving innovative designs and materials.
In 2008, the bi-annual World Monuments Fund/Knoll Modernism Prize was launched to award an innovative architectural or design solution that preserved a modern landmark or group of landmarks.
The first of its kind, the award acknowledges the growing threats—neglect, deterioration, or even demolition—now facing significant works of modernism, and recognizes the architects and designers who help ensure their rejuvenation and long-term survival. Its purpose is to raise public awareness of the influential role modernism plays in our architectural heritage, and recognize modern buildings as sustainable structures with viable futures.
2008 Modernism Prize
The inaugural 2008 World Monuments Fund/Knoll Modernism Prize was awarded to Brenne Gesellschaft von Architekten mbH, led by Winfried Brenne and Franz Jaschke, for its superb restoration of the former ADGB Trade Union School, a highly significant but little-known Bauhaus-designed landmark in Bernau, Germany.
Rigorous architectural and historical scholarship allowed Brenne Gesellschaft von Architekten mbH to restore the building according to its original plans. The school’s purpose was to provide further education to administrators and leaders of the trade union movement on such topics as economics, management, labor law, and industrial hygiene. Its asymmetry responds to the topography of the site; it was designed to bring the surrounding forests into constant view.
(Inset) Architect Hannes Meyer (1889–1954) was an ardent Marxist whose view of architecture as radically functional was informed by his political beliefs, a sensibility he brought to the Bauhaus, as head of the architecture department and then as its second director from 1928 to 1930
Bonnie Burnham, President, WMF Winfried Brenne, Modernism Prize winner Barry Bergdoll, Chief Curator of Architecture and Design at MoMA and Jury Chair Andrew Cogan, CEO, Knoll, Inc Franz Jaschke, Modernism Prize winner
2010 Modernism Prize
In 1995, the Modernist landmark Zonnestraal Sanatorium, located in Hilversum, Netherlands, was the picture of shambles. For their meticulous restoration of the building, World Monuments Fund (WMF) has awarded its 2010 World Monuments Fund/Knoll Modernism Prize to the Dutch firms Bierman Henket Architecten and Wessel de Jonge Architecten.
Bergdoll, who chaired this year’s jury, says they chose the winner based on the importance of the original building, the tenacity with which preservation was pursued, and technical execution. The latter criterion “gets particularly interesting with relation to Modernist buildings,” he says, “because there are decisions to be made about restoring materials that might not be in use, or updating the envelope’s thermal performance.”
World Monuments Fund awarded its 2010 World Monuments Fund/Knoll Modernism Prize to Bierman Henket Architecten and Wessel de Jonge Architecten for their exemplary restoration of the Zonnestraal Sanatorium (designed 1926-28; completed 1931), a little-known but iconic modern structure in Hilversum, the Netherlands. Zonnestraal was conceived by Johannes Duiker (1890-1935), the leading spokesperson for the modern movement in the Netherlands; Bernard Bijvoet (1889-1979); and structural engineer Jan Gerko Wiebenga (1880–1974).
Founded by the Diamond Workers Union of Amsterdam, the sanatorium was part of a larger aftercare colony for tubercular patients. It was funded by Union dues as a facility that would train members who had been afflicted with the disease for their return to society. Zonnestraal is emblematic of the emerging ideals of social democracy in the Netherlands during the 1920s, and it reflected the new concept of using occupational therapy in health care
Zonnestraal’s historic significance is well established. Beginning in 1926, Dutch architects Bernard Bijvoet and Johannes Duiker, with structural engineer Jan Gerko Wiebenga, designed the sanatorium for the Diamond Workers Union of Amsterdam as part of a healthcare campus for tuberculosis convalescents.
The sanatorium comprised a nursery, canteen, workshop, and other pavilions. Completion took place in stages. “You can almost date the pavilions by the relationship of the window to parapet wall—there are all these localized solutions,” says Bergdoll. “But at whatever date, the sanatorium represents almost primal rationalism. Nothing is hidden. There is this attempt to find a structural solution out of concrete, steel, and glass. It’s an incredibly straightforward, no-nonsense iconic language.”
Despite instant-icon status, Zonnestraal fell into disuse after World War II. It was rediscovered in the 1960s and, in 1982, the Dutch government commissioned Henket and de Jonge to create a restoration plan for the sanatorium as part of a larger conservation study.
Ultimately, the architects reconstructed the building’s facades, partitions, casement windows, and finishes, specifying handmade components that were no longer in production. Completed last year, the building again performs a healthcare function, with sports-injury and obesity clinics occupying the main building and workshops, respectively.
About Knoll
Since Knoll’s founding in 1938, design integrity has been our guiding principle as we offer insight into the way business is changing and into what’s possible—now and for the future.
For 73 years, Knoll has used modern design to connect people with their work, lives, and world. Since our founding in 1938, we have explored the power of modern design to create compelling work and residential environments that inspire and endure. Our design philosophy combines artistic inventions with functional efficiency and a commitment to environmental sustainability.
Knoll’s founders, Hans and Florence Knoll, embraced the creative genius at the Cranbrook Academy of Art and the Bauhaus School to create new types of furniture for the workplace and home. Their approach, where craftsmanship joined with technology through the use of design, anchors our perspective and shapes the values we endeavor to live by today.
About the WMF
World Monuments Fund (WMF) is the foremost private, international, non-profit organization dedicated to the preservation of historic architecture and cultural heritage sites around the world through fieldwork, advocacy, grant making, education, and training.
Founded in 1965, WMF is headquartered in New York, and has offices and affiliates around the world, including Cambodia, France, Peru, Portugal, Spain, and the United Kingdom. In addition to hands-on management, the affiliates identify, develop, and manage projects, negotiate local partnerships, and attract local support to complement funds provided by donors.
The WMF describes its mission as “to preserve important historic architectural sites and works of art without regard to national boundaries”.
Since 1965, WMF has worked tirelessly to stem the loss of historic structures at more than more than 500 sites in over 91 countries -including many UNESCO World Heritage Sites. WMF has worked at internationally famous tourist attractions as well as lesser-known sites.
Highly prominent projects are many temples at Angkor, Cambodia, starting in 1990, including Preah Khan and Phnom Bakheng; the Château de Chantilly in Chantilly, France; many structures in Rome, including the Temple of Hercules, Santa Maria Antiqua, and the House of Augustus; several sites on Easter Island; various sites at ancient Luxor in Egypt; Lalibela in Ethiopia; San Ignacio Miní in Argentina; the ancient Maya city of Naranjo, Guatemala; the Segovia Aqueduct in Segovia, Spain; as well as 25 projects in Venice, Italy, over 20 years.
WMF has also participated in projects in the United States, including Ellis Island, Mesa Verde National Park, the Mount Lebanon Shaker Society, and many sites in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast.
The International Fund for Monuments (IFM) was an organization created by Colonel James A. Gray (1909-1994) after his retirement from the U.S. Army in 1960. Gray had conceived of a visionary project to arrest the settlement of the Leaning Tower of Pisa by freezing the soil underneath, and formed the organization in 1965 as a vehicle for the implementation of this idea. Even though this project did not materialize, an opportunity arose for the young organization to participate in the conservation of the rock-hewn churches of Lalibela in Ethiopia.
In 1966 Gray secured the support of philanthropist Lila Acheson Wallace (1889-1984), who offered $150,000 to the International Fund for Monuments and UNESCO for this project. The project continued until the Communist overthrow of Haile Selassie I and the subsequent expulsion of foreigners from Ethiopia.
After Ethopia, Gray’s interests shifted to Easter Island (Rapa Nui) in Chile. Gray formed the Easter Island Committee, with Norwegian ethnographer and adventurer Thor Heyerdahl (1914–2002) as its honorary chairman. Gray arranged to have one of the monolithic human figures known as Moai exhibited in the United States. With the help of anthropologist William Mulloy (1917-1978), Gray selected an 8-foot-tall (2.4 m), five-ton head, which was exhibited in front of the Seagram Building in New York and in the Pan American Union building in Washington, D.C.
An important chapter for the organization started with its involvement in the broad international effort led by UNESCO for the protection of the city of Venice, Italy from catastrophic flooding. After the extremely high tide of November 4, 1966, the city, including the historic Piazza San Marco, was inundated for more than twenty-four hours.
The International Fund for Monuments set up a Venice Committee, with Professor John McAndrew (1904-1978) of Wellesley College as Chairman and Gray as Executive Secretary. On the part of the Committee, appeals were made to the American public, and local chapters set up in American cities. (This early initiative led to the formation of the independent organization Save Venice in 1971). These efforts helped establish a reputation for IFM.
In Spain, the organization formed a Committee for Spain under the leadership of American diplomat and U.S. Ambassador to Spain in 1965-67 Angier Biddle Duke (1915-1995).
At the invitation of UNESCO in the 1970s IFM became involved in architectural conservation in Nepal, where the organization adopted the Mahadev temple complex in Gokarna, in Nepal’s Kathmandu Valley. The 14th century temple building was surveyed, rotten timbers were replaced, and the foundations were strengthened. Sculpted wooden architectural elements were painstakingly cleaned of layers of a motor oil coating that had been applied annually for protection.
Also at the request of UNESCO, IFM launched a project for the preservation of the Citadelle Laferrière, a large mountaintop fortress near Milot, Haiti. The site was the keystone of a defensive system constructed in the early period of Haitian independence to protect the young state from French attempts to reclaim it as a colony. Local artisans reconstructed wooden and tile roofs over the grand gallery and batteries using traditional carpentry methods, and consolidated the stone galleries of the fortress. IFM also sponsored a traveling exhibition and a film about the history of the Citadelle, which was used for educational purposes in the United States.
Through donations and matching funds, WMF has worked with local community and government partners worldwide to safeguard and conserve places of historic value for future generations.
The Hadrian Award
Every year, World Monuments Fund presents the Hadrian Award to international leaders who have advanced the understanding, appreciation, and preservation of the world’s art and architecture at its annual benefit dinner.
The Hadrian Award was inspired by the Roman Emperor Hadrian (A.D. 76–138), a brilliant commander and administrator and a great patron of the arts, who demonstrated a concern for the survival of outstanding artistic works and a desire to convey the standards embodied in these works to his contemporary world.
1988: Carlo De Benedetti
1989: Paul Mellon
1990: His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales
1991: Brooke Astor
1992: Marella and Gianni Agnelli
1993: Dominique de Menil
1994: David Rockefeller
1995: Jacob Rothschild, 4th Baron Rothschild
1996: His Highness The Aga Khan IV
1997: Phyllis Lambert
1998: Richard Hampton Jenrette
1999: The Sainsbury Brothers – Tim, John, Simon Sainsbury
2000: Harvey Golub
2001: James Wolfensohn
2002: Hélène and Michel David-Weill
2003: Eugene Thaw
2004: Carlos Slim
2005: John Julius Cooper, 2nd Viscount Norwich
2006: His Highness Gajsingh, The Maharaja of Jodhpur
2007: Rahmi Koç, Semahat Arsel, Suna Kiraç
2008: Houghton, Doreen, and Graeme Freeman ( see video below)
2009: David Rockefeller, Jr.
2010: Ratan Naval Tata and the Tata family
2011: Ronald and Jo Carole Lauder ( see video below)
World Monuments Watch
Launched in 1996 and issued every two years, the World Monuments Watch is an international call to action for cultural heritage around the world that is at risk from the forces of nature and the impact of social, political, and economic change.
Since the first list was compiled in 1996, this program has drawn international attention to cultural heritage sites around the world threatened by neglect, vandalism, armed conflict, commercial development, natural disasters, and climate change. Through the World Monuments Watch, WMF fosters community support for the protection of endangered sites, and attracts technical and financial support for the sites.
The sites are nominated by international and local preservation groups and professionals, including local authorities. Sites of all types, including secular and religious architecture, archaeological sites, landscapes and townscapes, and dating from all time periods, from ancient to contemporary, are eligible.
An independent panel of international experts reviews and selects the sites that make up the list.
In 2010 the panelists were Christina Cameron, Alfredo Conti, Pierre-André Lablaude, Jeanne Marie Teutonico, and Christopher Young
Watch listing provides an opportunity for sites and their nominators to raise public awareness, foster local participation, advance innovation and collaboration, and demonstrate effective solutions. The announcement of the 2010 Watch was covered by over 1500 news outlets, reaching more than 250 million people worldwide. The international attention drawn to Watch sites provides a vital tool for local entities to leverage funding from a variety of sources. Increased awareness can also help bolster legislative efforts, foster partnerships, improve monitoring, and valorize connections between communities and their heritage.
In some instances, inclusion in the World Monuments Watch provides opportunities for WMF to assist with select projects. Since the program’s inception, more than 600 sites have been included on the Watch. Nearly 40% have developed into WMF projects, with direct WMF funding totally over $86 million. Much additional funding and technical assistance is offered by other agencies as a result of the awareness raised within communities and internationally by the Watch.
WMF contributed $2.2 million to projects at 2010 Watch sites, and others provided more than $25 million to sites included in the 2010 Watch by national, regional, and municipal governments, foundations, corporate sponsors, international aid, and private donors.
As the flagship advocacy program of World Monuments Fund, the Watch is emblematic of WMF’s commitment to inspiring heritage stewardship, forging partnerships, and advancing conservation.
In sponsoring the Watch program, WMF seeks to highlight emerging issues and opportunities in the field, confront urgent challenges, foster community engagement, and build capacities and constituencies for sustaining heritage protection in the long-term.
WMF Modernism Projects on Watch during 1996 – 2012
Belgium
RADIO AND TELEVISION BUILDING
Brussels, Belgium
Designed by the Belgian architect Joseph Diongre and completed in 1938, the Radio and Television building was one of the first broadcasting centers in Europe. (Learn More)
TOUR AND TAXIS (TRANSPORT HUB)
Brussels, Belgium
Beginning in the early 20th century, Belgian railroad, customs, and maritime interests converged at Tour and Taxis, a model transportation hub designed by architect Van Humbeek. (Learn More)
Cuba
NATIONAL ART SCHOOLS
Havana, Cuba
Czech Republic
TUGENDHAT VILLA
Brno, Czech Republic
Located on a hill overlooking the city of Brno, Tugendhat Villa is a seminal work of International Style architecture by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. (Learn More)
Eritrea
ASMARA HISTORIC CITY CENTER
Asmara, Eritrea
Finland
HELSINKI-MALMI AIRPORT
Helsinki, Finland
Israel
THE WHITE CITY
Tel Aviv, Israel
Lebanon
INTERNATIONAL FAIRGROUND
Tripoli, Lebanon
Panama
PANAMA CANAL AREA
Panama City, Chagres River, Panama
In the late nineteenth century, a French company began building what would come to be considered one of the greatest engineering achievements in human history.
Portugal
TEATRO CAPITÓLIO
Lisbon, Portugal
Romania
BRANCUSI’S ENDLESS COLUMN ENSEMBLE
Târgu-Jiu, Romania
Erected in 1934, the Endless Column by famed Romanian sculptor Constantin Brancusi (1876-1957) has been hailed as one of the great works of 20th-century outdoor sculpture.
Russia
MELNIKOV’S HOUSE AND STUDIO
Moscow, Russia
NARKOMFIN BUILDING
Moscow, Russia
RUSAKOV CLUB
Moscow, Russia
The avant-garde architect Konstatin Melnikov designed the Rusakov Club as a theater for workers who labored in nearby printing factories.
VIIPURI LIBRARY
Vyborg, Russia
The Viipuri Library in Vyborg, Russia, was designed and built by modernist Finnish architect Alvar Aalto between 1927 and 1935. At the time of construction the land was held by Finland.
United Kingdom
BATTERSEA POWER STATION
London, United Kingdom
United States
2 COLUMBUS CIRCLE
New York, New York, United States
The former Huntington Hartford Gallery of Modern Art, known for decades as 2 Columbus Circle, was designed by Edward Durell Stone, one of America’s most prolific architects, and built in 1964
A. CONGER GOODYEAR HOUSE
Old Westbury, New York, United States
When the A. Conger Goodyear House was completed in 1938, Edward Durell Stone was already well-known as one of the country’s leading architects working in the International Style.
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
Lakeland, Florida, United States
Located on a hillside overlooking Lake Hollingsworth, Florida Southern College contains the largest collection of Frank Lloyd Wright buildings in the world.
HISTORIC ROUTE 66
Chicago, IL, to Los Angeles, CA, United States
Route 66, once the primary highway from America’s interior to the West Coast, has played a now-legendary role in U.S. history since its designation in 1926.
MIAMI MARINE STADIUM
Miami, Florida, United States
Commodore Ralph Middleton Munroe Miami Marine Stadium was the first purpose-built venue for powerboat racing in the United States.
SCHINDLER KINGS ROAD HOUSE AND STUDIO
West Hollywood, California, United States
VDL RESEARCH HOUSE II
Los Angeles, California, United States
World Monument Fund – Building Projects
Afghanistan
BUDDHIST REMAINS OF BAMIYAN
Bamiyan, Afghanistan
2008
GHAZNI MINARETS
Ghazni, Afghanistan
2004
HAJI PIYADA MOSQUE (NOH GUMBAD)
Balkh, Afghanistan
2006
The Haji Piyada Mosque was built in the second half of the 9th century, only two centuries after the establishment of Islam and immediately following its arrival in Central Asia.
MURAD KHANE
Kabul, Afghanistan
2008
OLD CITY OF HERAT
Herat, Afghanistan
2010, 1998
The Old City of Herat in Western Afghanistan has a long history of rebuilding and restoration. The city was destroyed twice by the Mongols, in 1221 A.D.
TEPE NARENJ
Kabul, Afghanistan
2008
Albania
BUTRINT ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Sarandë, Albania
2000, 1998, 1996
Archaeological evidence indicates that Corfiot traders founded Butrint in the 8th century B.C.
VOSKOPOJË CHURCHES
Voskopojë, Albania
2004, 2002
Twenty-six churches were built between 1630 and 1780 at Voskopojë, situated along the trade route from Venice to Constantinople in southeastern Albania.
Algeria
MEDRACEN AND EL-KHROUB NUMIDIAN ROYAL MAUSOLEA
Constantine, Algeria
2008
TIPASA ARCHAEOLOGICAL PARK
Tipasa, Algeria
2000
Antarctica
SCOTT’S HUT AND THE EXPLORERS’ HERITAGE OF ANTARCTICA
Ross Island, Antarctica
2008, 2006, 2004
At the turn of the 20th century, Antarctica remained the only continent untouched by humans.
Argentina
BRENER SYNAGOGUE
Moises Ville, Argentina
2008
BUENOS AIRES HISTORIC CENTER
Buenos Aires, Argentina
2010
The first permanent European settlement on the site of modern-day Buenos Aires was founded in 1580 by Spanish conquistador Juan de Garay.
CASA SOBRE EL ARROYO
Mar del Plata, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina
2012
CITY OF LA PLATA
La Plata, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina
2012
JESUIT GUARANÍ MISSIONS
Several towns, Argentina
2004
PUCARÁ DE TILCARA
Quebrada de Humahuaca, Jujuy Province, Argentina
2012
SAN IGNACIO MINÍ
San Ignacio, Argentina
1996
In the midst of the Argentine rainforest stand the ruins of San Ignacio Miní, a 17th-century Jesuit mission complex.
TEATRO COLÓN
Buenos Aires, Argentina
2010
USHUAIA PRISON
Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina
1998
Armenia
AGHJOTS MONASTERY
Garni Village, Armenia
2010
KUMAYRI DISTRICT, ALEXANDRAPOL
Gyumri, Armenia
2008
Australia
DAMPIER ROCK ART COMPLEX
Dampier Archipelago, Australia
2008, 2006, 2004
The Dampier archipelago stretches from northwestern Australia into the Indian Ocean, its landscape marked by crags and ridges that were formed by the erosion of Precambrian lava activity.
Austria
BELVEDERE PALACE & GARDENS
Vienna, Austria
1996
At the turn of the 18th century, famed military commander Prince Eugene of Savoy purchased a tract of land in Vienna and commissioned Johann Lukas von Hildebrandt to design the Belvedere, a complex
FRANCISCAN CHURCH
Vienna, Austria
1996
WIENER WERKBUNDSIEDLUNG
Vienna, Austria
2010
Azerbaijan
KHINALYG VILLAGE
Guba Region, Azerbaijan
2008
Bahamas
WHYLLY PLANTATION AT CLIFTON POINT
Clifton Point, New Providence, Bahamas
2002
Bahrain
SUQ AL-QAYSARIYA
Muharraq, Bahrain
2010
Bangladesh
SONARGAON-PANAM CITY
Sonargaon, Bangladesh
2008, 2006
Barbados
MORGAN LEWIS SUGAR MILL
St. Andrew, Barbados
1996
The Morgan Lewis Sugar Mill is the last of the many Barbadian windmills once used to produce sugar, and one of only two functioning sugar windmills in the world.
Belarus
PERVOMAISK CHURCH
near Uzda, Minsk voblast, Belarus
2002
Belgium
PREVIOUS RADIO AND TELEVISION BUILDING
Brussels, Belgium
1998
Designed by the Belgian architect Joseph Diongre and completed in 1938, the Radio and Television building was one of the first broadcasting centers in Europe.
SANATORIUM JOSEPH LEMAIRE
Tombeek, Belgium
2010
TOUR AND TAXIS (TRANSPORT HUB)
Brussels, Belgium
2000, 1998, 1996
Beginning in the early 20th century, Belgian railroad, customs, and maritime interests converged at Tour and Taxis, a model transportation hub designed by architect Van Humbeek.
WORTEL COLONY ESTATE
Hoogstraten, Antwerp, Belgium
1998
Belize
EL PILAR ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESERVE
near San Ignacio, Cayo District, Belize
1996
HISTORIC ARCHITECTURE OF BELIZE CITY
Belize City, Belize
2012
Benin
AKABA IDÉNA
Kétou, Plateau Department, Benin
2012
ROYAL PALACES OF ABOMEY
Abomey, Benin
1998, 1996
Bhutan
PHAJODING
Thimphu, Bhutan
2010
WANGDUECHHOELING PALACE
Jakar, Bumthang District, Bhutan
2012
Bolivia
ARANI AND CALLAPA CHURCHES
Arani and Callapa, Bolivia
1998
CONVENTO-MUSEO SANTA TERESA
Cochabamba, Bolivia
2010
EL FUERTE DE SAMAIPATA
Samaipata, Santa Cruz Department, Bolivia
2012
MISIONES JESUÍTICAS DE CHIQUITOS (JESUIT MISSIONS OF CHIQUITOS)
Santa Cruz department, Bolivia
2010
RIO LAUCA BURIAL TOWERS
Sajama, Bolivia
1998
VALLEGRANDE AREA ROCK ART SITES
Vallegrande and Saipina, Bolivia
2004, 2002
Bosnia and Herzegovina
MEHMED-PASHA SOKOLOVIC BRIDGE
Visegrad, Bosnia and Herzegovina
2006
MOSTAR HISTORIC CENTER
Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina
2002, 2000
The Ottomans conquered Mostar in 1463 and brought Islamic influences and urban growth to the small town straddling the banks of the Nerevta River.
POCITELJ VILLAGE
Pocitelj, Bosnia and Herzegovina
1998, 1996
SARAJEVO CITY HALL
Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
2008
Brazil
HISTORIC CENTER OF SALVADOR DE BAHIA
Salvador, State of Bahia, Brazil
2012
HISTORIC OLINDA AND THE CONVENT OF SAN FRANCISCO
Olinda, Brazil
2006
PARANAPIACABA
Santo André, Brazil
2002, 2000
In the mid-19th century, the Saõ Paulo Railway Company laid a snaking network of tracks over Brazil’s green mountains.
PORANGATU HISTORIC DISTRICT
Porangatu, Brazil
2008
SAN FRANCISCO CONVENT
Olinda, Brazil
2006, 2004
San Francisco Convent lies along the sandy coastline of northeastern Brazil in the historic town of Olinda, which was founded in 1535. Its economy was fueled by the sugar trade.
SANTO ANTONIO DO PARAGUAÇU
São Francisco do Paraguaça , Bahia, Brazil
2000
SÃO NICOLAU
São Nicolau, Brazil
2004
With the aim of converting the native Guaraní population, the Jesuits established 30 missions in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in an area of South America that now includes parts
SERRA DA CAPIVARA NATIONAL PARK
São Raimundo Nonato, Piauí, Brazil
1996
Bulgaria
IVANOVO ROCK CHAPELS
Ivanovo, Bulgaria
2000, 1996
Founded in the first half of the 13th century, the rock chapels near the village of Ivanovo constitute a remarkable Eastern Orthodox Hesychastic monastic complex.
MADARA HORSEMAN
Madara, Shumen, Bulgaria
1998, 1996
NOVAE ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Svishtov, Bulgaria
2008
VIDIN SYNAGOGUE
Vidin, Bulgaria
2004
Burkina Faso
COUR ROYALE DE TIÉBÉLÉ
Tiébélé, Centre-Sud Region, Burkina Faso
2012
LOROPENI RUINS
Loropeni, Burkina Faso
2008
Spanning lands that cross the modern borders of Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, and Ghana, the Loropeni ruins are part of the larger Lobi Ruins, a 120-mile-by-60-mile cultural landscape.
Cambodia
ANGKOR ARCHAEOLOGICAL DISTRICT
Angkor, Siem Reap Province, Cambodia
1996
BANTEAY CHHMAR TEMPLE OF JAYAVARMAN VII
Thmar Puok, Cambodia
2002, 2000, 1998
A complex of eight temples deep in the Cambodian jungle, Banteay Chhmar was commissioned by the twelfth-century Khmer ruler Jayavarman VII in honor of five heroes, including his son, who died defen
PHNOM BAKHENG
Angkor Archaeological Park, Siem Reap, Cambodia
2006
Phnom Bakheng is one of Angkor’s oldest temples. It was built as a state temple between the late 9th and early 10th centuries, when King Yasovarman constructed it as the centerpiece of his new capital, Yasodharapura, later absorbed into Angkor.
PREAH KHAN TEMPLE
Angkor Archaeological Park, Siem Reap, Cambodia
1996
The Preah Khan temple complex situated at the northern edge of the Angkor Archaeological Park is one of the most significant buildings erected during the ancient Khmer empire.
TA SOM TEMPLE
Angkor, Siem Reap Province, Cambodia
1996
The Khmer temple of Ta Som, located at the eastern end of the Northern Baray at Angkor, was built at the end of the 12th century during the reign of the powerful Buddhist King Jayavarman VII.
Cameroon
BAFUT PALACE
Bafut, Cameroon
2006
Bafut Palace is located in the heart of the Bafut kingdom in northwest Cameroon.
Canada
GULF OF GEORGIA CANNERY
Richmond, British Columbia, Canada
1998
HERSCHEL ISLAND
Yukon Territory, Canada
2008
ST. JOHN’S ANGLICAN CHURCH
Lunenburg, Nova Scotia, Canada
2004
The second oldest Protestant church in Canada, St. John’s was built in 1753 to serve as a meeting house for its local community in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia.
Cape Verde
TARRAFAL CONCENTRATION CAMP
Tarrafal, Cape Verde
2006
Cayman Islands
MIND’S EYE
George Town, Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands
2012
Chile
ALAMEDA RAILROAD STATION
Santiago, Chile
1998
CERROS PINTADOS
Iquique, Chile
2006
CHILOÉ CHURCHES
Chiloé Island, Chile
1996
At least 150 wooden churches once stood on the Chiloé archipelago, a group of islands off the coast of central Chile.
EASTER ISLAND (RAPA NUI)
Orongo, Chile
2000, 1996
A Polynesian volcanic island in the southeastern Pacific Ocean, at the southeastern most point of the Polynesian triangle, Easter Island is a special territory of Chile that was annexed in 1888.
ELEVATORS OF VALPARAÍSO
Valparaíso, Chile
1996
With its labyrinth of interconnecting stairways, cobblestone alleys, pedestrian plazas, and vistas, Bellavista Hill is one of the most distinctive of Valparaíso’s 45 hill neighborhoods
HUMBERSTONE AND SANTA LAURA INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX
Iquique, Chile
2004
IGLESIAS DE ARICA PARINACOTA (CHURCHES OF ARICA PARINACOTA)
Municipios de Arica y Putre, Chile
2010
Between 1570 and the middle of the seventeenth century, the port of Arica was the main commercial shipping port for mercury and silver to and from Potosi, Bolivia.
MONTEMAR INSTITUTE OF MARINE BIOLOGY
Viña del Mar, Chile
2008
RUEDAS DE AGUA
Larmahue, Pichidegua, Chile
2002
TULOR VILLAGE
San Pedro de Atacama, Chile
2006, 1998
China
ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE OF THE PALACE OF NANYUE KINGDOM
Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China
2012
COCKCROW POST TOWN
Huailai, China
2006, 2004
DA QIN CHRISTIAN PAGODA AND MONASTERY
near Xi’an, Shaanxi Province, China
2002
DULAN COUNTY TIBETAN ROYAL TOMB GROUP
Reshui, Dulan County, Qinghai Province, China
2000
GREAT WALL OF CHINA CULTURAL LANDSCAPE
China
2004, 2002
The “Great Wall” refers to a series of defensive barriers erected between the 5th century B.C. and the mid-17th century to deter invaders from the north.
LIAO DYNASTY SITE
Chifeng, Inner Mongolia, China
1996
LU MANSION
Dong Yang, China
2006
MODERN SHANGHAI
Shanghai, China
2008
NAMSELING MANOR
near Shannan, Tibet Autonomous Region, China
1998, 1996
OHEL RACHEL SYNAGOGUE
Shanghai, China
2004, 2002
Jewish communities have existed in China for over 13 centuries, but today architectural traces are hard to find.
PALPUNG MONASTERY
Babang Village, Sichuan Province, China
2000, 1998
PUNING TEMPLE STATUES
Chengde, China
2004
The buildings at the imperial mountain resort at Chengde were built in stages between 1703 and 1792 and were where Qing emperors from Kangxi
QIKOU TOWN
Shanxi Province, China
2006
SAN XING DUI ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Guang Han City, China
1996
In 1984, following the discovery of a few bits of jade in an irrigation ditch, excavations near Guang Han City in Sichuan Province uncovered the earthen outer walls of an ancient city
SHAXI MARKET AREA
Yunnan Province , China
2002
The Shaxi Market Area, located in China’s Yunnan Province on the historic Tea and Horse Caravan Trail that links Tibet with Southeast Asia, is the most complete surviving example of a trading
STONE TOWERS OF SOUTHWEST CHINA
Various Locations, China
2006
Spread throughout Sichuan Province and the Tibet Autonomous Region, 250 stone towers rise above the trees of southwest China.
TIANSHUI TRADITIONAL HOUSES
Qincheng, China
2006, 2004
TIANTAI AN
Wangqu, Shanxi Province, China
2012
TUANSHAN HISTORICAL VILLAGE
Yunnan Province, China
2006
XIANNONGTAN (TEMPLE OF AGRICULTURE)
Beijing, China
2000, 1998
The temple complex dedicated to Xiannong, the father of agriculture, was built in 1420 below the Forbidden City and adjacent to the famed Temple of Heaven in Beijing.
XIANNONGTAN (TEMPLE OF AGRICULTURE)—JUFU HALL
Beijing, China
1998
XUANJIAN TOWER
Yuci City, Shanxi, China
2000
Xuanjian Tower, part of a complex dating to the 13th century, is the main feature of the Town God’s Temple in Yuci.
XUMISHAN GROTTOES
Guyuan County, China
2008
Colombia
HISTORIC CENTER OF SANTA CRUZ DE MOMPOX
Santa Cruz de Mompox, Bolívar Department, Colombia
2012
PAECES CHAPELS OF TIERRADENTRO
Páez Municipality, near Belalcazar, Cauca Department, Colombia
2012
SAN FERNANDO AND SAN JOSE FORTRESSES
Cartagena de Indias, Colombia
2010
SANTA FE DE ANTIOQUIA HISTORIC CENTER
Province of Antioquia, Colombia
2010
Comoros
UJUMBE PALACE
Mutsamudu, Anjouan, Comoros
2010
Croatia
DIOCLETIAN’S PALACE
Split, Croatia
1996
Built for use by Emperor Diocletian who in AD 305 became the first Roman emperor to voluntarily abdicate, the palace at Split on the eastern coast of the Adriatic is the preeminent classical herita
DUBROVNIK OLD CITY HARBOR
Dubrovnik, Croatia
1996
DUCAL PALACE
Zadar, Croatia
1998
From the High Middle Ages through the 20th century, the Ducal Palace of Zadar stood witness to the evolution of the city and survived countless attacks and occupations.
FRANCISCAN MONASTERY LIBRARY
Dubrovnik, Croatia
1998
Founded in 1235, the Franciscan monastery in Dubrovnik was an essential visit for pilgrims traveling between Europe and the Holy Land.
LOPUD FRANCISCAN MONASTERY
Lopud Island, near Dubrovnik, Croatia
1996
MARITIME QUARANTINE-LAZARETI
Dubrovnik, Croatia
2002
Between the 14th and 16th centuries, Dubrovnik was a key hub in the trade between the Ottoman Empire and the West, and its lazaret, or quarantine station, was built in 1627 to isolate the ill
NOVI DVORI CASTLE
Zaprešic, Croatia
2006
SAINT BLAISE CHURCH
Dubrovnik, Croatia
2006
SPLIT HISTORIC CENTER
Split, Croatia
1996
TVRĐA IN OSIJEK
Osijek, Slavonia, Croatia
1996
VUKOVAR CITY CENTER
Vukovar, Croatia
2002, 2000
Cuba
CALZADA DEL CERRO
Havana, Cuba
2004
CONVENT OF SANTA CLARA OF ASSISI
Havana, Cuba
1996
FINCA VIGIA (HEMINGWAY’S HOUSE)
San Francisco de Paula, Cuba
2006
NATIONAL ART SCHOOLS
Havana, Cuba
2002, 2000
PARISH CHURCH OF SAN JUAN BAUTISTA DE LOS REMEDIOS
San Juan de los Remedios, Villa Clara Province, Cuba
2012
REINA CEMETERY
Cienfuegos, Cuba
1998
SAN ISIDRO DE LOS DESTILADEROS
Trinidad, Valle de los Ingenios, Cuba
2000
SANTA TERESA DE JESÚS CLOISTERS
Havana, Cuba
2000
Cyprus
HISTORIC WALLED CITY OF FAMAGUSTA
Famagusta, Cyprus
2010, 2008
Located along the busy shipping lanes of the eastern Mediterranean, Famagusta rose to prominence after a large number of Christians resettled in the city following the fall of the Levantine city
Czech Republic
ČESKÝ KRUMLOV GARDEN
Český Krumlov, Czech Republic
1996
The Český Krumlov gardens lie between the imposing castle of the 18th-century Schwarzenburg princes and the surrounding Bohemian town, connecting the Gothic castle to the cobblestone streets
CHOTESOV MONASTERY
Chotesov, Czech Republic
2004
HEAVENLY FATHER CHAPEL
Kutna Hora, Central Bohemian Region, Czech Republic
1998
KUKS FOREST SCULPTURES
Kuks, Czech Republic
2000
In the New Forest bordering the town of Kuks in the Czech Republic, Mary Magdalene reclines amidst the fallen leaves while the three Magi perform their act of adoration nearby.
LEDNICE AND VALTICE CULTURAL LANDSCAPE
Lednice and Valtice, Czech Republic
1998
Over the centuries, the rural countryside between the southern Moravian towns of Lednice and Valtice had been a landscape divided by shifting national borders, scarred by conflicts like the Thirty
MONASTARY OF KLADRUBY
Kladruby, Tachov, Plzeň Region, Czech Republic
1996
NEBÍLOVY MANSION
Nebílovy, Plzeň Region, Czech Republic
1998
PRAGUE HISTORIC CENTER
Prague, Czech Republic
1998
ST. ANN’S CHURCH
Prague, Czech Republic
2004
Built in 1316, St. Ann’s Church stands at the foot of the Charles Bridge in the Old Town of Prague.
TEREZIN FORTRESS
Terezin, Czech Republic
2002
Terezin Fortress, a vast military complex with a perimeter of over 12 miles (20 kilometers), guards the confluence of the Elbe and Eger rivers in the northwest Czech Republic.
Dominican Republic
PARISH CHURCH OF SAN DIONISIO
Higüey, La Altagracia Province, Dominican Republic
2012
PUERTO PLATA LIGHTHOUSE
Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic
2000
Built in 1879 by R. Deeley & Co., a New York firm, the Puerto Plata Lighthouse once served as a beacon for ships traversing the Atlantic.
Ecuador
BOLIVAR THEATER
Quito, Ecuador
2004
LA COMPAÑIA CHURCH
Quito, Ecuador
1996
LAS PEÑAS
Guayaquil, Ecuador
2004
The highest concentration of historic houses and structures in the coastal city of Guayaquil is in the neighborhood of Las Peñas.
TODOS SANTOS COMPLEX
Cuenca, Ecuador
2010
The Todos Santos complex is located in the heart of Cuenca, Ecuador, deep within the Tomebamba River Valley. During the Inca era, Todos Santos served as a center for spiritual celebrations.
Egypt
CEREMONIAL ENCLOSURE OF KHASEKHEMWY AT HIERAKONPOLIS
Kom el-Ahmar, Egypt
2004, 2002, 2000
Hierakonpolis was the Predynastic capital of Upper Egypt, and grew to prominence in the mid-third millennium BC.
JAMA’A Al -AQSUNQUR (BLUE MOSQUE)
Cairo, Egypt
2008
The Blue Mosque is the largest mosque in the Bab al-Wazir district of Cairo.
NEW GOURNA VILLAGE
Luxor, West Bank, Egypt
2010
New Gourna Village, an experimental earthen village on the West Bank of the Nile, is a testament to how the relationship between heritage and society is often fraught with multiple meanings and con
OLD MOSQUE OF SHALI FORTRESS
Siwa Oasis, Egypt
2010
QA’ITBAY SABIL
Cairo, Egypt
1996
SABIL RUQAYYA DUDU
Cairo, Egypt
2006, 2004
SHUNET EL-ZEBIB
Abydos, Egypt
2008
Shunet el-Zebib was built circa 2750 B.C. and served as a funerary cult enclosure of the Khasekhemwy, a second dynasty king.
SULTAN AL-MUAYYAD HOSPITAL
Cairo, Egypt
2002
SULTAN QA’ITBAY COMPLEX
Cairo, Egypt
2000
Mamluk sultan Qa’itbay’s fountain-school complex was constructed in 1477 in central Cairo.
TARABAY AL-SHARIFY
Cairo, Egypt
2006
The monumental complex of Tarabay al-Sharify stands at the southern end of Al-Azhar Park.
THE MORTUARY TEMPLE OF AMENHOTEP III
Luxor, Egypt
2004, 1998
The mortuary temple of Amenhotep III was erected between 1390 and 1353 B.C. for the New Kingdom Pharoah, Amenhotep III. (Learn More)
VALLEY OF THE KINGS
Luxor (Ancient Thebes), Egypt
2002, 2000
Thebes, now the modern city of Luxor in central Egypt, was the royal capital of the Ancient Egyptian civilization during the New Kingdom (1539-1075 B.C.).
WEST BANK OF THE NILE
Luxor, Egypt
2008, 2006
WHITE AND RED MONASTERIES
Sohag, Egypt
2002
El Salvador
SAN MIGUEL ARCÁNGEL AND SANTA CRUZ DE ROMA CHURCHES
Panchimalco and Huizucar, El Salvador
2006, 2004
SUCHITOTO CITY
Cuscatlán, El Salvador
2000, 1998
Eritrea
ASMARA HISTORIC CITY CENTER
Asmara, Eritrea
2006
DARBUSH TOMB
Massawa, Eritrea
2008
KIDANE-MEHRET CHURCH
Senafe, Debub, Eritrea
2006
The Church of Kindane-Mehret is a rare representation of Eritrean religious architecture dating to the Axumite Empire (A.D. 100-700).
MASSAWA HISTORIC TOWN
Massawa, Eritrea
2006
Ethiopia
MENTEWAB-QWESQWAM BANQUETING HALL
Gondar, Ethiopia
2000, 1998
The buildings at this archaeological site date to the 17th and 18th centuries when the court of Gondar was the capital of Christian Ethiopia beginning in 1632.
MOHAMMAD ALI HOUSE
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
2008
Fiji
LEVUKA
Ovalau, Fiji
1998
Finland
HELSINKI-MALMI AIRPORT
Helsinki, Finland
2006, 2004
France
CHÂTEAU AQUEDUCT
Castelnau-Pegayrolles, Aveyron, France
1996
CHÂTEAU DE CHANTILLY
Chantilly, France
2002, 1998
The Château de Chantilly sits at the confluence of the Oise and Seine Rivers in northern France and is a magnificent stone complex surrounded by manicured lawns, farms, ponds, and stables.
EGLISE PAROISSIALE DE SAINT-MARTIN-DES-PUITS
Saint Martin-des-Puits, France
2010
EPAILLY CHAPEL OF THE ORDER OF THE TEMPLE
Courban, France
2008
HÔTEL DE MONNAIES
Villemagne L’Argentière, France
2010
SAINT PIERRE CATHEDRAL
Beauvais, France
2002, 2000
SAINT-EMILION MONOLITHIC CHURCH
Saint-Emilion, France
1996
In the 8th century, a Breton monk named Emilion fled to southern France to escape persecution by the Benedictine order and adopted an eremitic existence, living in a cave.
Gambia
JAMES ISLAND
Lower Niumi District, Gambia
1998
First settled in 1651 by traders from present-day Latvia on an earlier native site, James Island on the River Gambia was a cultural crossroads from the late 15th to the late 19th centuries.
Georgia
ART NOUVEAU BUILDINGS
Cities of Tbilisi, Batumi, Kutaisi, Poti, and Dusheti, Georgia
2002
BODBE CATHEDRAL
Sighnaghi, Kakheti Region, Georgia
2002
CHURCH OF THE VIRGIN
Timotesubani, Georgia
2004
Adorned with a series of mural paintings dating from the twelfth century, the medieval Church of the Virgin in Timotesubani was built during the reign of Queen Tamar (r.
GELATI MONASTERY AND ACADEMY
Kutaisi, Georgia
2008
IKORTA CHURCH OF THE ARCHANGEL
Zemo Artsevi Village, Georgia
2000
JVARI MONASTERY
Mtshekta, Georgia
2006
PITARETI MONASTERY
Tetritskaro District, Georgia
1996
TBILISI HISTORIC DISTRICT
Tbilisi, Georgia
2002, 2000, 1998
Located at a crossroads of Europe and Asia on the famous Silk Road, Tbilisi has faced repeated invasions since its founding in the fifth century as rival powers have sought to control its strategic
Germany
FESTSPIELHAUS HELLERAU
Hellerau, Dresden, Saxony, Germany
1996
GARTENREICH DESSAU-WÖRLITZ
Dessau, Germany
2000
KARL-THEODOR BRIDGE
Heidelberg, Germany
2002
Over more than 700 years, nine bridges were built in succession at a single spot along Europe’s Neckar River, where the waterway weaves through the German city of Heidelberg.
THOMASKIRCHE
Leipzig, Germany
2000
Constructed in Leipzig, Germany, in the early 13th century by the Augustinian monastic order, Thomaskirche, or St.
Ghana
ASANTE TRADITIONAL BUILDINGS
near Kumasi, Ashanti Region, Ghana
2012
LARABANGA MOSQUE
Larabanga, Ghana
2002
Dating from the 17th century, Larabanga Mosque is the oldest mosque in Ghana, and one of the country’s most revered religious sites.
Wa, Ghana
2008
Wa Naa’s Palace, home to the King of Wala people, the major local population of Wa region, is located in the heart of Wa Town and is a major cultural attraction.
Greece
CHURCHES OF LESVOS
Lesvos, Greece
2010, 2008
The island of Lesvos contains a large number of historic churches, many with fine religious iconography.
ETZ HAYIM SYNAGOGUE
Hania, Greece
1996
In the 17th century, the Jewish community of Hania acquired a vacant Venetian church, the 15th-century Church of St.
FIRST CEMETERY OF ATHENS
Athens, Greece
2012
HELIKE ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Achaia, Greece
2006, 2004
KAHAL SHALOM SYNAGOGUE
Rhodes, Greece
2000
Synagogue Kahal Kadosh Shalom (Holy Congregation of Peace), better known as the New Synagogue, is the only Sephardic temple remaining on the Greek island of Rhodes and the oldest surviving synagogu
PALAIKASTRO ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Palaikastro, Crete, Greece
2004, 2002
PELLA TOMBS
Pella, Greece
2008
Guatemala
ARCHAEOLOGICAL PARK AND RUINS OF QUIRIGUÁ
Los Amates, Izabal Department, Guatemala
2012
CAPITANES GENERALES PALACE
Antigua, Guatemala
2008
The city of Antigua was founded in 1543 in the valley of Panchoy, surrounded by the Agua, Fuego, and Acatenago volcanoes.
CEIBAL ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Sayaxche, Guatemala
2008
EL ZOTZ
Petén Department, Guatemala
2012
KAMINALJUYU
Near Guatemala City, Guatemala
2010
The archaeological park of Kaminaljuyu is located in Guatemala’s highland central valley, in close proximity to the ever-expanding urban development of Guatemala City.
NARANJO
El Petén, Guatemala
2006
Naranjo, the second largest Maya city in Guatemala after Tikal, developed between 500 B.C. and A.D. 950, although the main period of construction took place during the Late Classic period (A.D.)
PIEDRAS NEGRAS
Peten, Guatemala
2002
Piedras Negras (Black Stones) was the capital of a Maya kingdom that stretched along the banks of Central America’s Usumacinta River between the 4th century B.C. and the 9th century A.D.
USUMACINTA RIVER CULTURAL LANDSCAPE
Usumacinta River Valley, Guatemala
2004, 2002, 2000
Today, the Usumacinta River defines the border between Guatemala and the Mexican state of Chiapas, but in antiquity its waters lay between the rival Maya cities of Piedras Negras and Yaxchilán. The two settlements were founded in the 1st millennium B.C., separated by 25 miles (40 kilometers) of dense jungle and the white rapids of the Usumacinta.
Guyana
MORUKA-WAINI CULTURAL LANDSCAPE
Warao Settlements, Barima-Waini, Guyana
1996
Haiti
GINGERBREAD NEIGHBORHOOD
Port-au-Prince, Haiti
2012, 2010
In October 2009, the Gingerbread houses of Port-au-Prince were included on the 2010 World Monuments Watch in order to raise international awareness about this unique architectural heritage.
JACMEL HISTORIC DISTRICT
Jacmel, Haiti
2012
PALACE OF SANS SOUCI
Milot, Haiti
2012
Hungary
ROYAL GARDEN PAVILIONS
Budapest, Hungary
1996
The Royal Garden Pavilion was designed by Miklós Ybi, an important nineteenth-century Hungarian architect, and built between 1875 and 1882 on the embankment of the Danube River at the foot of Castle
SPA CENTER HISTORIC ENSEMBLE
Balatonfüred, Hungary
1998
TURONY CHURCH
Turony, Baranya, Hungary
2004
India
AHMEDEBAD WALLED CITY
Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India
1998
AMBER TOWN
Amber Town, Jaipur Municipality, Rajasthan, India
2008
Once the capital city of the Kachwahas—one of the legendary Rajput clans that rose to power during the Middle Ages in what is now the northern Indian state of Rajasthan—Amber Town was first occupied
ANEGUNDI HISTORIC SETTLEMENT
Karnataka, India
2002
BAGH-I-HAFIZ RAKHNA
Sirhind-Fategarh, Punjab, India
2012
BALAJI GHAT
Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, India
2012
BHUJ DARBARGADH
Bhuj, Gujarat, India
2004
CHAMPANER-PAVAGADH
Panchmahal, India
2000
In the 15th and 16th centuries, the city of Champaner was an important post along the trade route linking the states of Malwa and Gujarat in western India.
CHETTINAD
Karaikudi, Tamil Nadu, India
2008
CHIKTAN CASTLE
Kargil, India
2010
DALHOUSIE SQUARE
Kolkata, India
2006, 2004
The former Dalhousie Square, now known as Benoy-Badal-Dinesh Bagh, is an oasis at the heart of modern Kolkata, formerly Calcutta, in eastern India. (Learn More)
DECHEN NAMGYAL GONPA
Nyoma, India
2010
DHANGKAR GOMPA
Spiti Valley, India
2006
DWARKA DHEESH MANDIR TEMPLE
Ahmedabad, India
2002
Dwarka Dheesh Mandir Temple is one of the oldest surviving haveli, or house-temple, complexes in Ahmedabad.
GURU LHAKHANG AND SUMDA CHUN TEMPLES
Leh, India
2006
HISTORIC CIVIC CENTER OF SHIMLA
Shimla, India
2010
HISTORIC HAVELIS OF BIKANER
Bikaner, Rajasthan, India
2012
JAISALMER FORT
Jaisalmer, India
2000, 1998, 1996
Built in 1156 by King Rawal Jaisal, Jaisalmer Fort dominates the countryside in the far northwestern corner of Rajasthan, near the border of India and Pakistan.
JANTAR MANTAR
Jaipur, India
2008
KOTHI, QILA MAHMUDABAD
Mahmudabad, India
2010
LEH OLD TOWN/LEH PALACE
Leh, India
2008
In the early fifteenth century, Dragpa Bumdey, King of Ladakh, built the first fortifications in Leh as well as a small royal residence along a mountain ridge high above the town.
LUTYENS BUNGALOW ZONE
Delhi, India
2002
METROPOLITAN BUILDING
Calcutta, West Bengal, India
2000
NAKO TEMPLES
Kinnaur Region, Himachal Pradesh, India
2002
Situated 3,600 meters above the Spiti River, Nako is one of the most isolated villages on earth.
OSMANIA WOMEN’S COLLEGE
Hyderabad, India
2004, 2002
QUILA MUBARAK
Patiala, Punjab, India
2004
ROYAL OPERA HOUSE
Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
2012
SAINT ANNE CHURCH
Talaulim, Goa, India
2000
The Church of Saint Anne, also known as Sant’Ana or Santana Church, is the parish church of the small village of Talaulim, located about 10 miles from Panjim, the capital of Goa
SRINAGAR HERITAGE ZONE
Srinagar, India
2008
SUMDA CHUN MONASTERY
Leh, India
2006
Located at 12,700 feet above sea level in a remote part of the Himalayas, the village of Sumda Chun is accessible only by a 3- to 4-hour hike up a steep and winding river valley trail.
TAJ MAHAL
Agra, India
1996
The Taj Mahal is a white marble mausoleum built by Emperor Shah Jahan for his second wife, Mumtaz Mahal, who died in childbirth in 1631.
WATSON’S HOTEL
Mumbai, India
2006
Indonesia
BOROBUDUR
Central Java, Indonesia
1996
DESA LINGGA
Karo Regency, North Sumatra Province, Indonesia
2012
KOTAGEDE HERITAGE DISTRICT
Kotagede, Indonesia
2008
OMO HADA
Nias, Indonesia
2006, 2004, 2002, 2000
Omo Hada is a rare surviving 18th-century traditional Indonesian village.
TAMANSARI WATER CASTLE
Yogyakarta, Indonesia
2004
Tamansari, meaning perfumed garden, is the name for the gardens and associated structures built in 1765 for Hamengku Buwono I, the Sultan of the kingdom of Yogyakarta.
TANAH LOT TEMPLE
Beraban, Bali, Indonesia
2000
Tanah Lot Temple is a complex of wooden structures with origins in the 15th and 16th centuries, built on a large coral rock separated from the nearby island of Bali.
Iran
BAM
Bam, Iran
2006
Iraq
AL-HADBA’ MINARET
Mosul, Iraq
2010
CULTURAL HERITAGE SITES OF IRAQ
Iraq
2008, 2006
ERBIL CITADEL
Erbil, Iraq
2004, 2002, 2000
NINEVEH AND NIMRUD PALACES
near Mosul, Iraq
2004, 2002
Ireland
ATHASSEL ABBEY
near Golden, Tipperary, Ireland
2004
CLONMACNOISE
County Offaly, Ireland
1996
HEADFORT HOUSE
Kells, Ireland
2004
In the early 1770s Thomas Taylor, the first Earl of Headfort, commissioned Irish architect George Semple to build Headfort House.
HILL OF TARA
Meath, Ireland
2008
RUSSBOROUGH
Blessington, County Wicklow, Ireland
2010
SAINT BRENDAN’S CATHEDRAL
Clonfert, County Galway , Ireland
2000
Clonfert Cathedral, also known as St. Brendan’s Cathedral, is a 12th-century Hiberno-Romanesque structure on the site of Saint Brendan’s 6th-century monastery in Clonfert, Ireland.
VERNON MOUNT
Cork, Ireland
2008
WONDERFUL BARN
Kildare, Ireland
2006
Israel
APOLLONIA-ARSUF
Herzliya, Israel
2004
BET SHE’ARIM ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Kiryat Tiv’on, Haifa District, Israel
2002
GEMEINDEHAUS
Haifa, Israel
1998, 1996
OLD CITY OF LOD
Lod, Israel
2010
RAMLA WHITE MOSQUE
Ramle Municipality, Israel
2000, 1998
TEL-DAN CANAANITE GATE
Upper Galilee, Israel
2000
THE WHITE CITY
Tel Aviv, Israel
1996
Italy
ACADEMY OF HADRIAN’S VILLA
Tivoli, Italy
2006
ANCIENT POMPEII
Pompeii, Italy
1998, 1996
The ancient Roman towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum and villas near the Bay of Naples were buried by the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in August A.D.
ARCH OF TRAJAN
Ancona, Marche, Italy
1998
BARTOLOMEO COLLEONI MONUMENT
Venice, Italy
1996
The Bartolomeo Colleoni equestrian statue, located beside the Scuola Grande di San Marco in the Campo SS Giovanni e Paolo, was erected in fulfillment of a request made by the condotierro
BOTANICAL GARDEN OF PADUA UNIVERSITY
Padua, Veneto, Italy
1998
CHAINS BRIDGE
Bagni di Lucca, Italy
2002, 2000
Il Ponte della Catene, or the Chains Bridge, spans the Lima River in Tuscany, connecting the towns of Fomoli and Chifenti.
CIMITERO ACATTOLICO
Rome, Italy
2006
CINQUE TERRE
Liguria, Italy
2002, 2000
Cinque Terre describes the Mediterranean coastline between Genoa and Tuscany, where the hills are carved into green terraces that descend toward the water.
CIVITA DI BAGNOREGIO
Civita di Bagnoregio, Italy
2006
DOMUS AUREA
Rome, Italy
1996
ETRUSCAN PAINTED TOMBS OF TARQUINIA
Tarquinia, Lazio, Italy
1998
FARNESE NYMPHAEUM
Rome, Italy
2008
FENESTRELLE FORTRESS
Fenestrelle, Turin, Italy
2008
GARDENS OF VILLA MEDICI AT CASTELLO
Florence, Italy
1996
GROTTOES OF SAN MICHELE
Salerno, Italy
1996
HISTORIC CENTER OF CRACO (Centro Storico di Craco)
Craco, Italy
2010
LIMONAIA AT BOBOLI GARDENS AND GARDEN OF VILLA MEDICI AT CASTELLO
Florence, Italy
1998
Design and construction of the Boboli Gardens behind the Palazzo Pitti began in 1549 under Cosimo I de Medici.
MURGIA DEI TRULLI
Murgia dei Trulli, Italy
2006
NEOPITAGORICA BASILICA
Rome, Lazio, Italy
1998, 1996
PALAZZO DORIA PAMPHILI
Valmontone, Lazio, Italy
1998
PONTE LUCANO
Tivoli, Italy
2010
PORT OF TRAJAN ARCHAEOLOGICAL PARK
Fiumicino, Italy
2004, 2002
PORTICI ROYAL PALACE
Naples, Italy
2006
RUINS ON THE RIVER CENTA
Albenga, Liguria, Italy
1996
RUPESTRIAN CHURCHES OF PUGLIA AND THE CITY OF MATERA
Puglia and Matera, Italy
1998
In 1464, Pope Paul II gave the Ciminelli family his blessing to enhance the church of San Pietro Barisano in the I Sassi district of Matera, the northernmost province in the Puglia region of Italy.
SAN GIACOMO MAGGIORE PORTICO
Bologna, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
1996
SANTA MARIA ANTIQUA CHURCH
Rome, Italy
2004
Located at the base of the Palatine Hill in the Roman Forum, the sixth-century church of Santa Maria Antiqua is one of the earliest surviving Christian monuments in Rome.
SANTA MARIA IN STELLE HYPOGEUM
Verona, Italy
2006, 1996
Publio Pomponio Corneliano and his family constructed the hypogeum of Santa Maria in Stelle in the early third century A.D.
SANTI AMBROGIO E CARLO AL CORSO
Rome, Italy
1996
SANTI QUATTRO CORONATI CLOISTER
Rome, Italy
2000
Within the fortress-like Basilica of Santi Quattro Coronati complex is an early-13th-century cloister that is possibly the earliest structure in Rome in the Cosmatesque style, which is characterize
TEMPLE OF HERCULES
Rome, Italy
1996
The Temple of Hercules, situated in the Forum Boarium on the eastern bank of the Tiber, is one of the oldest extant buildings in Rome.
TEMPLE OF PORTUNUS
Rome, Italy
2006
The Temple of Portunus, dating to the first century B.C., is a rare survivor of Roman Republican architecture and a reminder of the magnificence of the Forum Boarium in Antiquity, once a major comm
TERRA DEL SOLE PRISON CELLS
Castrocaro Terme e Terra del Sole, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
1998
TRANSHUMANCE CULTURAL LANDSCAPE
Molise Region, Italy
2008
TUFF TOWNS AND VIE CAVE
Lazio, Tuscany, and Umbria, Italy
2006, 2004
The towns of Pitigliano, Sorano, Manciano, and Civita di Bagnoregio lie balanced on the crests of steep Italian hills, built into the tufa (or tuff) bedrock, a soft stone formed from volcanic ash.
VILLA OF SAN GILIO
Oppido Lucano, Italy
2010
VISCONTIAN BRIDGE-DAM
Valeggio sul Mincio, Italy
2008
Jamaica
FALMOUTH HISTORIC TOWN
Falmouth, Jamaica
2008, 2004, 2002, 2000
OLD IRON BRIDGE
Spanish Town, Jamaica
1998
In the late 18th century, Jamaica’s House of Assembly passed an act commissioning the construction of a much-needed bridge between Kingston and Spanish Town in St. Catherine.
Japan
DENCHU HIRAKUSHI HOUSE AND ATELIER
Taitō, Tokyo, Japan
2012
EAST JAPAN EARTHQUAKE HERITAGE SITES
Tōhoku and Kantō Regions, Japan
2012
MACHIYA TOWNHOUSES
Kyoto, Japan
2012, 2010
The machiya of Kyoto are traditional townhouses dating from the Edo period (1603–1867). Born out of the city’s growing merchant class, they functioned as both residences and workspaces.
TOMO PORT TOWN
Fukuyama, Japan
2004, 2002
For over 1,000 years Tomo, in the city of Fukuyama, has existed as a fishing village and an active port along the Seto Nakai, or Inland Sea.
Jordan
ABILA
Quweilbeh, Irbid Governorate, Jordan
2012
AIN GHAZAL
Amman, Jordan
2004
DAMIYA DOLMEN FIELD
Damiya, Jordan Valley, Jordan
2010
JORDAN RIVER CULTURAL LANDSCAPE
Jordan River, Jordan
2008
KHIRBET ET-TANNUR
Tafilah, Jordan
2008
PETRA ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Wadi Mousa, Jordan
2002, 2000, 1998, 1996
The magnificent ruins of ancient Petra occupy a high plateau that rises out of Wadi Mousa, the Valley of Moses, in southwest Jordan.
PETRA ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE—SOUTHERN TEMPLE
Wadi Mousa, Jordan
1996
QUSAYR ‘AMRA
Azraq, Jordan
2008
Qusayr ‘Amra, located 85 km to the east of Amman, is a small residence discovered by the Czech traveler Alois Musil in 1898.
Kazakhstan
NECROPOLISES OF NOMADS IN MANGYSTAU
Mangystau Province, Kazakhstan
2012
VERNACULAR ARCHITECTURE OF THE KAZAKH STEPPE SARY-ARKA
Zhezkazgan, Kazakhstan
2010
Kenya
MTWAPA HERITAGE SITE
Mtwapa, Kenya
2006, 2004
With its vast architectural remains, abundant wildlife, and idyllic location, the ancient port of Mtwapa is one of the most important sites on Kenya’s Swahili Coast. Occupied between a.d.
THIMLICH OHINGA CULTURAL LANDSCAPE
Migori District, Kenya
2002, 2000
Built in the 14th century on a hill, Thimlich Ohinga is a complex surrounded by stone walls now partially covered under Savannah bush land.
Laos
CHOM PHET CULTURAL LANDSCAPE
Luang Prabang, Laos
2006
HINTANG ARCHAEOLOGICAL LANDSCAPE
Houameuang District, Laos
2010
TAM TING
Nam Kong River at Ban Pak Ou, Laos
2010
VAT SISAKET
Vientiane, Laos
1998, 1996
Latvia
ABAVA VALLEY CULTURAL LANDSCAPE
Kurzeme Region, Latvia
1998, 1996
RIGA CATHEDRAL
Riga, Latvia
2006
Riga Cathedral, the centerpiece of Latvia’s capital city, was built in the early 13th century in the Romanesque style.
Lebanon
ANCIENT TYRE
Tyre, Lebanon
1996
Tyre, situated approximately 50 miles south of Beirut, was founded by Phoenician settlers in the third millennium B.C.
CHEHABI CITADEL
Hasbaya, Lebanon
2006
ENFEH ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Enfeh, Lebanon
2002, 2000, 1998
INTERNATIONAL FAIRGROUND
Tripoli, Lebanon
2006
ISKANDAROUNA-NAQOURA CULTURAL LANDSCAPE
Oumm el’ Amed, Lebanon
2004
Libya
WADI MATHENDOUS ROCK ART
Fezzan, Libya
2008
Lithuania
VILNIUS TOWN WALL
Vilnius, Lithuania
1998
Macedonia
HOLY MOTHER OF GOD PERIBLEPTOS CHURCH
Ohrid, Macedonia
2008
STOBI
Gradsko, Macedonia
2012
TRESKAVEC MONASTERY AND CHURCH
Prilep/Dabnica, Macedonia
2006
Madagascar
FIANARANTSOA OLD CITY
Fianarantsoa, Madagascar
2008
ROYAL HILL OF AMBOHIMANGA
Ambohimanga Rova, Antananarivo Province, Madagascar
2012
Malaysia
GEORGE TOWN HISTORIC ENCLAVE
Georgetown, Penang Island, Malaysia
2002, 2000
George Town, established as a British trading port in 1786, displays its vivid and varied cultural heritage through the array of buildings and architectural styles found along its streets.
KAMPUNG CINA RIVER FRONTAGE
Kuala Terengganu, Malaysia
2002, 2000, 1998
A line of modest wooden buildings follows the gently curving waterfront at Kampung Cina, the oldest street in what is now one of Malaysia’s largest cities, Kuala Terengganu.
Mali
BANDIAGARA ESCARPMENT CULTURAL LANDSCAPE
Dogon Country, Mali
2004
The dramatic 95-mile long Bandiagara Escarpment in Mali, West Africa, has been inhabited since at least the 3rd century B.C.
DJENNÉ-DJENO ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Djenné, Mali
1996
Although the archaeological site of Djenné-Djeno is located just three kilometers southeast of the modern village of Djenné, the site was unknown until the 1970s.
MÉDINE FORT
near Kayes, Mali
2002
Malta
FORT ST. ELMO
Valletta, Malta
2008
MNAJDRA PREHISTORIC TEMPLES
Qrendi, Malta
2002, 2000, 1998
The Mnajdra Prehistoric Temples lie along the southern coast of Malta amidst the blue waters of the central Mediterranean.
Mauritania
CHINGUETTI MOSQUE
Chinguetti, Mauritania
2008, 2006
Mexico
ACUEDUCTO DE TEMBLEQUE
Zempoala to Otumba, Mexico
2010
CAROLINA HACIENDA
Chihuahua, Mexico
1998
CHALCATZINGO
Morelos, Mexico
2006
Established around 1500 B.C., Chalcatzingo, which means venerated place of sacred water in the Náhuatl language, is an important prehistoric site in central Mexico that initially developed
CHIHUAHUA MISSIONS
Chihuahua, Mexico
2008
COLONIAL BRIDGE OF TEQUIXTEPEC
San Miguel Tequixtepec, Oaxaca, Mexico
2012
HUACA HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOOD
Veracruz, Mexico
2008
INMACULADA CONCEPCIÓN CHAPEL
Nurio, Mexico
2002
JESÚS NAZARENO CHURCH IN ATOTONILCO
Atotonilco, Mexico
1996
Constructed by Father Felipe Neri Alfaro, the Sanctuary of Jesus Nazareno of Atotonilco is famous for its murals that reflect a syncretism of Catholic religious iconography mixed with native religi
LA TERCENA
Metztitlan, Hidalgo, Mexico
2004
LAS POZAS
Xilitla, Mexico
2010
In 1944, Edward James, a wealthy British poet and artist and early patron of surrealist art, purchased a plot of land in Mexico’s Huasteca region.
MADERA CAVE DWELLINGS
Madera, Mexico
2000, 1998
MEXICO CITY HISTORIC CENTER
Mexico City, Mexico
2006
Seven centuries of Mexican history are recorded in the architectural landscape of the Centro Histórico, or Historic Center, of Mexico City, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
MODERN MURAL PAINTINGS
Mexico City, Mexico
1996
Jose Vasconcelas, Mexico’s first Minister of Education following the country’s revolution, saw the value of public art as a vehicle to foster civic pride and national spirit.
MONASTERIES OF SAN JUAN BAUTISTA IN TETELA DEL VOLCÁN AND TLAYACAPAN
Tetela del Volcán and Tlayacapan, Morelos, Mexico
1998
MONTE ALBÁN ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Oaxaca, Mexico
2008
The ancient Zapotec metropolis of Monte Albán was founded in the 6th century B.C. on a flattened mountain overlooking the city of Oaxaca.
OXTOTITLAN
Acatlán, Guerrero, Mexico
2004
PALACE OF FINE ARTS (PALACIO DE BELLAS ARTES)
Mexico City, Mexico
1998
A stunning Art Nouveau masterpiece, originally designed by Adamo Boari and envisioned for the centenary celebrations of Mexico’s independence in 1910, the Palace of Fine Arts
PIMERÍA ALTA MISSIONS
Mexico
2006, 2004
RUTA DE LA AMISTAD
Mexico City, Mexico
2012
SAN FRANCISCO DE TZINTZUNTZAN CONVENT
Tzintzuntzan, Mexico
2004
SAN JUAN BAUTISTA IN CUAUHTINCHAN
Cuauhtinchan/Puebla, Mexico
2006
Located in the Mexican state of Puebla, the San Juan Bautista convent in Cuauhtinchan was built between 1528 and 1554 on the site of a 12th-century Tolteca-Chichimeca foundation
SAN JUAN DE ULÚA FORT
Veracruz, Mexico
2002, 2000, 1996
For nearly 350 years, the San Juan de Ulúa Fort in Veracruz served as the primary military stronghold of the Spanish Empire in the Americas.
SAN NICOLÁS OBISPO
Morelia, Mexico
2006
SANTA PRISCA PARISH CHURCH
Taxco de Alarcón, Mexico
2000
Santa Prisca Church was built following the discovery of a silver mine on the property of José de la Borda.
TEMPLO DE SAN BARTOLO SOYALTEPEC (Church of San Bartolo Soyaltepec)
Oaxaca, Mexico
2010
TEMPLO DE SAN FELIPE TINDACO (Church of San Felipe Tindaco)
Tlaxiaco, Mexico
2010
TEMPLO Y CONVENTO DE LOS SANTOS REYES Y CONVENTO DE LA COMUNIDAD (Santos Reyes Church and Monastery and La Comunidad Convent)
Metztitlán, Mexico
2010
TEOTIHUACAN ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE—QUETZALCOATL TEMPLE
San Juan Teotihuacan, Mexico
2004, 2000, 1998
For the first half of the first millennium, A.D, Teotihuacán was the dominant civilization in Mesoamerica and one of the great cities of the ancient world.
TEUCHTITLÁN-GUACHIMONTONES ARCHAEOLOGICAL ZONE
Teuchtitlan, Mexico
2008
VEGA DE LA PEÑA ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Filobobos, near Tlapacoyan, Veracruz, Mexico
1998
YAXCHILÁN ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Chiapas, Mexico
2002, 2000
Yaxchilán is located on the border between Guatemala and Mexico, sandwiched between the Usumacinta River and the Lacandon Forest, and across the river from another ancient Maya city, Piedras Negras
YUCATÁN INDIAN CHAPELS
Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico
1996
Moldova
ASSUMPTION OF OUR LADY CHURCH
Causeni, Moldova
2010
BARBARY-BOSIA MONASTERY COMPLEX
Butuceni, Orhei, Moldova
2002
Mongolia
BOGD KHAN PALACE MUSEUM
Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
2000, 1998, 1996
GESER SUM MONASTERY
Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
2004
Morocco
AL-AZHAR MOSQUE
Fez, Morocco
2008
LIXUS
Larache, Morocco
2010
RABBI SHLOMO IBN DANAN SYNAGOGUE
Fez, Morocco
1996
Fez, home to a flourishing Jewish community during the 17th century, was also the location of two well known temples, Rabbi Shlomo Ibn Danan Synagogue, built and founded by the Ibn Danan family
SAHRIJ AND SBAIYIN MADRASSA COMPLEX
Fez, Morocco
2004
A sacred city of Islam, Fez is the oldest of Morocco’s four imperial cities and the country’s third-largest.
SIJILMASSA
Rissani, Morocco
1996
Mozambique
ISLAND OF MOZAMBIQUE
Nampula Province, Mozambique
1996
Myanmar
SRI-KSETRA TEMPLES
near Pyay, Myanmar
2002
Nepal
GOMPAS OF UPPER MUSTANG
Lo Manthang, Upper Mustang, Nepal
1998, 1996
ITUM BAHA MONASTERY
Kathmandu, Nepal
2002, 2000
Kathmandu Valley, a fertile bowl nestled among peaks of the Himalayan mountain range, has been a base of religious activity for centuries.
PATAN ROYAL PALACE COMPLEX
Patan, Nepal
2006
The Patan Royal Palace Complex was constructed in the 17th century as part of the extensive building program of King Siddhinarasimha Malla, which was continued by his son Srinivasa.
TEKU THAPATHALI MONUMENT ZONE
Kathmandu, Nepal
2002, 2000, 1996
Netherlands
BETH HAIM PORTUGUESE JEWISH CEMETERY
Ouderkerk aan de Amstel, North Holland, Netherlands
2012
New Zealand
CANTERBURY PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT BUILDINGS
Christchurch, Canterbury, New Zealand
2012
Niger
GIRAFFE ROCK ART SITE
Agadez, Niger
2000
The engravings of Agadez, on the edge of the Aïr Natural World Heritage Site, is one of the most extraordinary rock art sites in the region, consisting of over 800 prehistoric images
Nigeria
BENIN CITY EARTHWORKS
Edo, Nigeria
2006, 2004, 2002
IKOM MONOLITHS OF CROSS RIVER STATE
Ikom, Nigeria
2008
Norway
SANDVIKEN BAY
Bergen, Norway
2006
VÅGÅ OLD CHURCH
Vågåmo, Norway
1996
WOODEN ARCHITECTURE OF TRONDHEIM
Trondheim, Norway
1998
Old City of Jerusalem
CATHEDRAL OF ST. JAMES
Old City of Jerusalem
2010
Pakistan
MIAN NASIR MOHAMMED GRAVEYARD
Dadu District, Pakistan
2006
PETROGLYPHS IN THE DIAMER-BASHA DAM AREA
Northern Areas, Pakistan
2010
Meandering through gorges of the Indus River valley and across high mountain passes, ancient arteries of the fabled Silk Road cut through the Diamer District of Northern Pakistan.
SHIKARPOOR HISTORIC CITY CENTER
Shikarpoor Municipality, Pakistan
2010, 2008
TAMBA WARI
Indus River Delta, Sindh, Pakistan
1996
THATTA MONUMENTS
Thatta, Pakistan
2006
UCH MONUMENT COMPLEX
Uch, Pakistan
2002, 2000, 1998
The ancient city of Uch, located west of Lahore on the edge of the Cholistan Desert, was one of several metropolises founded by Alexander the Great on his crusade through Central Asia
Palestinian Territory
AL-QASEM PALACE
Beit Wazan, Palestinian Territory
2004
CHURCH OF THE HOLY NATIVITY
Bethlehem, Palestinian Territory
2008
TELL BALATAH
Shechem (or Ancient Nablus), Palestinian Territory
2006, 2004
TELL UMM EL-‘AMR (SAINT HILARION MONASTERY)
Nuseirat, Gaza Strip, Palestinian Territory
2012
Panama
COROZAL CEMETERY
Panama City, Panama
2010
HISTORIC CENTER OF COLÓN
Colón, Panama
2010
Colón, originally a low-lying coral island, lies at the Caribbean entrance to the Panama Canal.
MOUNT HOPE CEMETERY
Colón, Panama
2010
PANAMA CANAL AREA
Panama City, Chagres River, Panama
2006, 2004
In the late nineteenth century, a French company began building what would come to be considered one of the greatest engineering achievements in human history.
SAN GERÓNIMO FORT
Portobelo, Panama
2002, 2000, 1998
WAY ON CEMETERY
Panama City, Panama
2012
Paraguay
LA SANTÍSIMA TRINIDAD DE PARANÁ
Trinidad, Paraguay
2010, 2004
La Santísima Trinidad, established in 1706 and completed in 1712, was one of the 30 missions established by the Jesuits in the region in the 17th and 18th centuries in what is now Paraguay
PARAGUAY RAILWAY SYSTEM
Asuncion to Sapucay, Paraguay
2004
Peru
ALAMEDA DE LOS DESCALZOS AND PASEO DE AGUAS
Rímac, Lima, Peru
2012
ANGASMARCA TEMPLE
Angasmarca, La Libertad, Peru
2004
APURLEC ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
near Motupe, Lambayeque, Peru
1998
CAJAMARCA HISTORIC CENTER
Cajamarca, Peru
1998
Located in the northern mountains of Peru, Cajamarca was settled by pre-Inca cultures as early as 5000 B.C.
CAJAMARQUILLA ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Lima, Peru
2006
CARAL ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Supe Valley, Barranca Province, Peru
2002
CHANKILLO
San Rafael District, Peru
2010
Chankillo was built as a fortified temple complex over 2,300 years ago in the coastal desert of Peru, near the Casma-Sechín river basin.
CUSCO HISTORIC CENTER
Cusco, Peru
2002, 2000, 1996
JESUIT CHURCHES OF SAN JOSÉ AND SAN JAVIER
Changuillo and El Ingenio, Nazca, Peru
2010
KUELAP FORTRESS
Amazonas, Peru
2004
Kuelap, one of the largest ancient monuments of the Americas, was a fortified citadel in northern Peru on the slopes of the Andes.
LARAOS TERRACES
Yauyos, Peru
2008
The andenería, or terraced landscape of Laraos, is believed to date to the pre-Inca period and is a defining feature of the steep slopes of the Peruvian Andes.
LIMA HISTORIC CENTER
Lima, Peru
2008
Founded by Francisco Pizarro in 1535 as “the City of Kings,” Lima was laid out according to the standard Spanish colony grid plan that was superimposed on a crossing point of pre-existing
LINES AND GEOGLYPHS OF NASCA
Nasca, Ica Region, Peru
2012
LOS PINCHUDOS ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Rio Abiseo National Park, Peru
2002, 2000
Among rock shelters, ceremonial structures, houses, terraces, and funerary chambers is the cemetery of Los Pinchudos, a key feature of the National Park of Río Abiseo.
MACUSANI-CORANI ROCK ART
Macusani and Corani, Peru
2008
OUR LADY OF GUADALUPE MONASTERY
Guadalupe, La Libertad, Peru
2004
OYÓN VALLEY MISSIONARY CHAPELS
Taucur, Andajes, La Chimba, Nava, Quichas, Mallay, and Rapaz, Peru
2002
The 40 surviving chapels in the Oyón Valley were built in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries as part of a Spanish program to convert Peru’s indigenous population to Christianity.
PACHACAMAC SANCTUARY
Lurín, Peru
2010
PARQUE ARQUEOLÓGICO DE PIKILLAQTA
Cusco, Peru
2010
PRESBITERO MAESTRO CEMETERY
Lima, Peru
2006
QUINTA DE PRESA
Rímac, Lima, Peru
2012
QUINTA HEEREN
Lima, Peru
2006, 1998
RANSOM ROOM
Cajamarca, Peru
1998
REVASH FUNERARY COMPLEX
Santo Tomas de Quillay, Peru
2006
SAN CRISTÓBAL DE RAPAZ CHURCH
Rapaz, Peru
2002, 1996
In the 16th and 17th centuries colonial Catholic missions were established in the Oyón Valley in Peru and built in a style described as Rural Andean Baroque.
SAN FRANCISCO DE ASIS DE MARCAPATA
Marcapata, Peru
2010
SAN PEDRO APÓSTOL DE ANDAHUAYLILLAS CHURCH
Andahuaylillas, Peru
2008
San Pedro Apóstol was built by Jesuits in the 16th century over a pre-Columbian huaca, or ceremonial space. (Learn More)
SAN PEDRO DE MÓRROPE CHAPEL
Mórrope, Peru
2002
The chapel of San Pedro de Mórrope was constructed in the 16th century during the Colonial period in Peru in an effort to convert the indigenous Mochica people to Christianity.
SANTA CATALINA MONASTERY
Arequipa, Peru
2008
The Convent of Santa Catalina de Siena was built in 1579 and is located in the historical center of Arequipa, Peru.
SANTUARIO DE NUESTRA SEÑORA DE COCHARCAS
Chincheros, Peru
2002
SANTUARIO HISTÓRICO MACHU PICCHU
Distrito de Machu Picchu, Peru
2010, 2008, 2000
TAMBO COLORADO
Humay, Peru
2010
TEMPLO SANTA CRUZ DE JERUSALÉN DE JULI (Church of Santa Cruz of Jerusalem)
Juli, Peru
2010
TÚCUME ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Túcume, Peru
2006, 2004
Philippines
ANGONO PETROGLYPHS
Angono, Rizal, Philippines
1996
Discovered in 1965, the Angono Petroglyphs are believed to be the oldest known artworks in the Philippines.
KABAYAN MUMMY CAVES
Kabayan, Philippines
1998
When industrial activity began in the forests north of Manila, loggers discovered ancient burial caves hewn out of the rock containing mummified remains and hundreds of coffins and skulls.
NUESTRA SEÑORA DE LA ASUNCIÓN
Municipality of Santa Maria, Philippines
2010
RICE TERRACES OF THE PHILIPPINE CORDILLERAS
Ifugao, Philippines
2010, 2000
SAN SEBASTIAN BASILICA
Manila, Philippines
2010, 1998
Poland
DEBNO PARISH CHURCH
Nowy Targ, Poland
1998, 1996
JERUSALEM HOSPITAL OF THE TEUTONIC ORDER
Malborka, Poland
2006
MAUSOLEUM OF KAROL SCHEIBLER
Lodz, Poland
2006
OLD LUBLIN THEATER
Lublin, Poland
2004
OUR LADY’S ASSUMPTION BASILICA
Hebdów (near Krakow), Poland
1996
The Church of Our Lady’s Assumption was founded in the mid-twelfth century within a Norbertine monastery
PRÓZNA STREET
Warsaw, Poland
1996
ST. PARASKEWA CHURCH
Radruż, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, Poland
2012
VISTULAMOUTH FORTRESS
Gdansk, Poland
2000, 1998
The origins of Vistulamouth Fortress probably date to the early medieval period, when a lighthouse and watchtower guarding the mouth of the Vistula River occupied the site of the current structures
WISLICA ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Wislica, Poland
2002
Portugal
CÔA VALLEY PETROGLYPHS
Vila Nova de Foz Côa, Guarda District, Portugal
1996
JARDIM BOTÂNICO DE LISBOA
Lisbon, Portugal
2012
ROMAN VILLA OF RABAÇAL
Rabaçal, Portugal
2004
The 4th-century Roman villa of Rabaçal is perhaps the most important ruin at the site of ancient Conimbriga, one of the largest Roman sites, and the best preserved, in Portugal.
TEATRO CAPITÓLIO
Lisbon, Portugal
2006
Romania
BÁNFFY CASTLE
Bontida, Romania
2000
From the 14th century through 1944, Bánffy Castle was occupied by members of the aristocratic Bánffy family, whose ranks included the first governor of Transylvania under the Hapsburg
BRANCUSI’S ENDLESS COLUMN ENSEMBLE
Târgu-Jiu, Romania
1996
Erected in 1934, the Endless Column by famed Romanian sculptor Constantin Brancusi (1876-1957) has been hailed as one of the great works of 20th-century outdoor sculpture.
FORTIFIED CHURCHES OF SOUTHERN TRANSYLVANIA
Sibiu, Romania
2010
ORADEA FORTRESS
Oradea, Romania
2006
ROMANO CATHOLIC CHURCH
Ghelinta, Romania
1998, 1996
The Romano Catholic Church of Saint Emeric was built in the thirteenth century by the first Christian settlers in present day Ghelinta.
Russia
ALEXANDER PALACE
St. Petersburg, Tsarskoje Selo, Russia
1998, 1996
Designed by the Italian architect Giacomo Quarenghi and completed in 1796, Alexander Palace housed three generations of Russian monarchs before it was abandoned by the royal family in the months
ARKHANGELSKOYE STATE MUSEUM
Moscow, Russia
2002, 2000
In the 18th century, Prince Nikolai Golitsyn commissioned French architects to craft an elaborate palace and grounds on the outskirts of Moscow.
ASSUMPTION CHURCH
Kondopoga, Russia
2002
CATHERINE PALACE – AGATE PAVILION
St. Petersburg, Tsarskoje Selo, Russia
1998
CHINESE PALACE AT ORANIENBAUM STATE MUSEUM
Oranienbaum, Russia
2004, 2002, 2000
The Chinese Palace at Oranienbaum, an addition to Prince Alexander Menshikov’s estate at Oranienbaum, was the first palace commissioned by Russian empress Catherine the Great following her
CHURCH OF OUR SAVIOR ON THE MARKETPLACE AND ROSTOV VELIKY HISTORIC CENTER
Rostov Veliky, Yaroslavl Oblast, Russia
2002, 2000
Located on the shores of Lake Nero, 210 kilometers northeast of Moscow, Rostov Veliky can trace its origins to the year 862, making it one of Russia’s oldest cities.
CHURCH OF THE ICON OF THE MOTHER OF GOD OF THE SIGN
Podol’sk, Russia
2010
IRKUTSK HISTORIC CENTER
Irkutsk, Siberia, Russia
2000, 1998
KARELIAN PETROGLYPHS
Belomorsky and Pudozhsky Districts, Republic of Karelia, Russia
2002
KIZHI POGOST
Kizhi Island in Lake Onega, Republic Of Karelia, Russia
1996
Kizhi Pogost is located on one of the many hundreds of islands on tranquil Lake Onega in the northern region of Karelia.
MELNIKOV’S HOUSE AND STUDIO
Moscow, Russia
2006
MENDELEEV TOWER
St. Petersburg, Russia
2008
NARKOMFIN BUILDING
Moscow, Russia
2006, 2004, 2002
NEW JERUSALEM MONASTERY
Istra, Russia
2002
Founded under Patriarch Nikon in the 17th century in Istra on the outskirts of Moscow, the New Jerusalem Monastery was meant to evoke the Holy Land and serve as a pilgrimage site.
PAANAJÄRVI VILLAGE
Republic of Karelia, Russia
2000, 1998, 1996
PERM-36
Kuchino, Russia
2004
ROSTOV VELIKY HISTORIC CENTER
Rostov Veliky, Russia
2000
RUSAKOV CLUB
Moscow, Russia
2000, 1998
The avant-garde architect Konstatin Melnikov designed the Rusakov Club as a theater for workers who labored in nearby printing factories.
SEMENOVSKOE-OTRADA
Moscow Oblast, Russia
2006
ST. PETERSBURG HISTORIC SKYLINE
St. Petersburg, Russia
2008
VIIPURI LIBRARY
Vyborg, Russia
2002, 2000
The Viipuri Library in Vyborg, Russia, was designed and built by modernist Finnish architect Alvar Aalto between 1927 and 1935. At the time of construction the land was held by Finland.
YELAGIN ISLAND PALACE AND PARK ENSEMBLE
St. Petersburg, Russia
1998
Yelagin Island, located in the Neva River just north of St. Petersburg, was one of the Romanov dynasty’s retreats in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Saint Helena
SAINT HELENA
Saint Helena
2012
Samoa
PULEMELEI MOUND
Palauli, Letolo Plantation, Samoa
2006
Senegal
SAINT-LOUIS ISLAND
Saint-Louis, Senegal
2008
Serbia
DEČANI AND PEĆ MONASTERIES
Metohija and Pec, Serbia
2002
PRIZREN HISTORIC CENTER
Prizren, Serbia
2006, 2004, 2002
SUBOTICA SYNAGOGUE
Subotica, Serbia
2006, 2002, 2000, 1996
Designed in the late 1890s and built in 1902, Subotica Synagogue is among the most impressive examples of Art Nouveau ecclesiastical architecture in the region.
Sierra Leone
FREETOWN HISTORIC MONUMENTS
Freetown, Sierra Leone
2008
OLD FOURAH BAY COLLEGE
Freetown, Sierra Leone
2006
Slovakia
BANSKÁ ŠTIAVNICA CALVARY COMPLEX
Banská Štiavnica, Slovakia
2008
The town of Banská Stiavnica was once an important silver-mining town, enjoying particularly strong economic growth in the 18th century, when it became the third-largest town in the Kingdom
BASIL THE GREAT CHURCH
Krajné Cierno, Slovakia
2000
Basil the Great Church belongs to a small and precious collection of wooden churches in the rural Carpathian mountain region of Slovakia, a significant border between Eastern and Western Christian
HELL HOUSE
Banská Štiavnica, Slovakia
1998
LEDNICKÉ-ROVNE HISTORICAL PARK
Lednické-Rovne, Slovakia
2006
LIETAVA CASTLE
Lietava, Slovakia
2010
SAINTS COSMOS AND DAMIAN
Lukov-Venecia, Slovakia
2004
The distinctive wooden architecture of the Church of Saints Cosmos and Damian reflects the unique cultural and religious reflects the unique cultural and religious traditions the Greek Orthodox Church maintained in Slovakia in the seventeen
SPIŠSKÉ PODHRADIE SYNAGOGUE
Spišské Podhradie, Slovakia
STUPAVA SYNAGOGUE
Stupava, Slovakia
Slovenia
COMMUNITY CONSERVATION FOR SLOVENIA
Koper, Slovenia
URSULINE CHURCH OF THE HOLY TRINITY (SAINT TRINITY CHURCH)
Ljubljana, Slovenia
The Ursuline Church of the Holy Trinity, known locally as Uršulinska Cerkev Sv Trojice, is a Baroque church in Ljubljana, Slovenia’s capital and largest city.
Spain
ALHAMBRA
Granada, Spain
The Alhambra was begun in the mid-thirteenth-century under Muhammad ibn al Ahmar, Emir of Granada, to serve as the palace and fortress complex of the Moorish Nasrid dynasty.
AQUEDUCT OF SEGOVIA
Segovia, Spain
The Aqueduct of Segovia was built during the second half of the 1st century A.D. under the rule of the Roman Empire and supplied water from the Frío River to the city into the 20th century.
CARTUJA DE SANTA MARIA DE MIRAFLORES
Burgos, Spain
Cartuja de Santa Maria de Miraflores in Burgos was founded by John II, King of Castilla y Leon following the destruction by fire of an earlier monastery.
CONCEPCIÓN REAL DE CALATRAVA CHURCH
Madrid, Spain
CONVENTO DE LA CORIA
Trujillo, Spain
Trujillo lies about 170 miles west of Madrid in a rugged and barren area of Spain known as Extremadura.
EL ESCORIAL MONASTERY
Madrid, Spain
FRANCISCO PIZARRO HOUSE MUSEUM (CASA MUSEO DE FRANCISCO PIZARRO)
Trujillo, Spain
MÁLAGA ROMAN THEATER
Málaga, Spain
The Roman theater in the southern Spanish city of Málaga is thought to have been built early in the first century A.D. during the reign of Augustus.
MOORISH HOUSES OF GRANADA
Granada, Spain
The neighborhood of Albayzin in Granada, Spain, contains several Moorish houses, some dating to the period of the Alhambra, many of which were built in the 16th century.
OVIEDO CATHEDRAL
Oviedo, Spain
PAZO DE SAN MIGUEL DAS PENAS
Monterroso/Lugo, Spain
Twelve centuries of art and architecture are chronicled in the buildings found in the hills of northwestern Spain.
ROYAL MONASTERY OF GUADALUPE
Guadalupe, Spain
Constructed in 1389 to commemorate the miraculous appearance of the Virgin the previous year, the Royal Monastery of Guadalupe sits at an altitude of 660 meters in the Villuerca Mountains
SAINT QUIRZE DE DURRO CHURCH
Boi Valley, Durro, Spain
SAN CLEMENTE MONASTERY
Toledo, Spain
The Royal Monastery of San Clemente was first built in 1131 by King Alfonso VII. The structure was built on existing Moorish houses and became one of the largest monastic complexes in Toledo.
SANTA MARIA DE VITORIA CATHEDRAL
Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain
Santa María de Vitoria Cathedral was built by King Alfonso VIII of Castile after the conquest of Vitoria in the second half of the 12th century.
SANTA MARIA LA MAYOR IN TORO
Toro, Spain
Situated on a cliff at the edge of the fortified city of Toro, the Collegiate Church of Santa Maria overlooks the narrow, jagged streets of the city as well as the winding Duero River
SANTO DOMINGO EL ANTIGUO
Toledo, Spain
Founded by Alfonso VI, Santo Domingo el Antiguo de Silos is the oldest monastery in Toledo, dating to 1085.
THE SALÓN RICO OF THE PALACE OF THE MEDINA AL-ZAHRA
Córdoba, Spain
Abd-el-Rahman III commissioned the Medina Al-Zahra after elevating himself to Caliph of Córdoba and to secure his supremacy in Al-Andalus in the middle of the tenth century.
TOLEDO CATHEDRAL (OCHAVO CHAPEL AND SAN BLAS CHAPEL)
Toledo, Spain
The Toledo Cathedral was built in the 13th century and contains several beautifully decorated chapels, including the Ochavo and San Blás chapels.
WINDMILLS OF MALLORCA
Mallorca, Spain
Flour windmills, dating from the 16th to the 19th centuries, are still a significant feature of the landscape of the Balearic Islands, and are a strong symbol of prosperity and engineering acumen,
Sri Lanka
HISTORIC GALLE
Galle, Sri Lanka
Seized by the Portuguese from the Sinhala kings in 1587, the historic city of Galle was the most important port in Sri Lanka for centuries.
Suriname
JODENSAVANNE ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Redi Doti, Suriname
Jodensavanne (Jewish Savannah) was settled by a population of Sephardic Jews fleeing the Spanish Inquisition on mainland Europe in the mid-seventeenth century.
Sweden
BORGHOLM AND KALMAR CASTLES
Isle of Oland, Sweden
Syria
AMRIT ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Near Tartous, Syria
Amrit is an ancient Phoenician site located on the Mediterranean coast of Syria.
AYYUBID PALACE COMPLEX IN THE CITADEL OF ALEPPO
Aleppo, Syria
Aleppo is one of the oldest continuously inhabited centers of human settlement and has flourished for millennia.
SHAYZAR CASTLE
Shayzar, Syria
Built along the banks of the Orontes River just northwest of Hama, the Syrian town of Shayzar was, for much of its history, a strategic prize for the Muslim and Christian forces who battled for con
TELL MOZAN
Al-Hasakah Governorate, Syria
Tell Mozan, located in northeast Syria in the Khabur River plain, is the site of ancient Urkesh, a place associated with the Hurrians, a Bronze Age people of Upper Mesopotamia.
TEMPLE OF THE STORM GOD IN THE CITADEL OF ALEPPO
Aleppo, Syria
The storm god is an ancient divinity that manifested itself in awe-inspiring thunderstorms and was important for agriculture.
THRONE HALL FORECOURT IN THE CITADEL OF ALEPPO
Aleppo, Syria
The Citadel of Aleppo, one of the oldest continuously occupied settlements in the world, richly preserves layers of its occupation from the Hittite, Hellenistic, Roman,
Byzantine, Zangid, Ayyubid, (Learn More)
TOMB OF THE THREE BROTHERS
Palmyra, Syria
Tanzania
HISTORIC SITES OF KILWA
Lindi Region, Tanzania
The island of Kilwa Kisiwani is located in the south of Tanzania, a short boat ride from the mainland.
Thailand
AYUTTAYA AND OTHER FLOODED SITES
Chao Praya River, Thailand
Tunisia
BULLA REGIA
Jendouba, Tunisia
Bulla Regia is a significant archaeological site in the northwestern part of Tunisia.
Turkey
ANI CATHEDRAL
Ani, Turkey
Located in modern-day eastern Turkey, Ani Cathedral is one of the most significant architectural structures remaining from the prosperous Armenian Bagratid period in the 10th and 11th centuries A.D
APHRODISIAS ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Geyre Beledesi, Turkey
Aphrodisias, named after its patron goddess Aphrodite, was founded in the 2nd century B.C. on the site of a rural sanctuary of Aphrodite.
ÇATALHÖYÜK ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Cumra area, Turkey
CENTRAL IZMIR SYNAGOGUES
Izmir, Turkey
At the end of the fifteenth century, Jews fleeing the Spanish Inquisition began to settle in the Kemeralti district of Izmir.
CHURCH OF THE HOLY SAVIOR
Ani, Turkey
Located in modern-day eastern Turkey, Surp Amenap’rkitch, or the Church of the Holy Savior, is one of the few structures still standing at Ani from the prosperous Armenian Bagratid period in
CHURCH OF THE MONASTERY OF CHRIST PANTOKRATOR (ZEYREK CAMII)
Istanbul, Turkey
Shortly after Constantinople fell to the invading Ottoman armies in 1453, the twelfth-century Church of the Monastery of Christ Pantokrator was converted into the Zeyrek Camii mosque.
EPHESOS ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Selçuk, Turkey
EPHESOS ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Selçuk, Turkey
HAGIA SOPHIA
Istanbul, Turkey
Justinian I, one of the earliest Byzantine rulers, ordered the architects Anthemius of Tralles and Isidorus of Miletus to design Hagia Sophia in the heart of what was then Constantinople.
MERYEM ANA – MOTHER OF GOD CHURCH
Göreme, Cappadocia, Turkey
MOUNT NEMRUT ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Adiyaman Province, Turkey
Antiochus I, an Armenian king whose lineage connected him to the Seleucids, Ptolemies, and Macedonians, ruled the small territory of Commagene in Asia Minor in the 1st century B.C.
PATARA ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Kas, Turkey
Wide, protective sandy beaches and a deep Mediterranean bay helped make Patara the wealthy capital of the Lycian-Pamphylian province during the Roman Empire.
RED CHURCH
Güzelyurt, Sivrihisar, Cappadocia, Turkey
Kizil Kilise, also known as the Red Church, is one of the oldest churches on the vast plains of the Cappadocia region in Turkey. (Learn More)
SAINT NICHOLAS CHURCH
Myra, Turkey
TEMPLE OF AUGUSTUS AND ROME
Ankara, Turkey
The Temple of Augustus and Rome was built between 25 and 20 B.C. following the Roman conquest of central Anatolia and the designation of Ancyra (modern-day Ankara) as the new capital of Galatia.
Turkmenistan
ANCIENT MERV ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE
Bairam Ali, Turkmenistan
The oasis of Merv is strategically sited in the Karakum desert and formed an essential military headquarters and staging post on major east-west trade routes.
Uganda
MASAKA CATHEDRAL
Kitovu Village, Uganda
In 1909, a small church was built in the Ugandan village of Kituvo.
Ukraine
ANCIENT CHERSONESOS
Sevastopol, Ukraine
CHORAL SYNAGOGUE
Kiev, Ukraine
GREAT CHORAL SYNAGOGUE
Odessa, Ukraine
The Great Choral Synagogue of Odessa, built in 1840 after a fire destroyed an earlier structure dating from 1790, is one of two surviving synagogues in what was once a thriving center of Jewish culture
TSORI GILOD SOCIETY SYNAGOGUE (L’VIV SYNAGOGUE)
L’ viv, Ukraine
UKRAINE MISSION
Ukraine
ZHOVKVA SYNAGOGUE
Zhovkva, Ukraine
United Kingdom
6 PALACE STREET
Caernarfon, United Kingdom
BATTLE OF WATERLOO MODEL BY SIBORNE
Stratfield Saye, United Kingdom
BRADING ROMAN VILLA
Isle of Wight, United Kingdom
CASTLE SINCLAIR GIRNIGOE
Wick, Caithness, Scotland, United Kingdom
Castle Sinclair Girnigoe is a complex of ruined stone structures built and modified over a 200-year period by the Sinclair earls of Caithness, historically one of northern Scotland’s most powerful clans
CHRIST CHURCH SPITALFIELDS
London, United Kingdom
CONGREGATION OF JACOB SYNAGOGUE
London, United Kingdom
DITCHLEY PARK
Oxfordshire, United Kingdom
DULWICH PICTURE GALLERY
London, United Kingdom
GREYFRIARS KIRKYARD
Edinburgh, United Kingdom
INGRAM STREET TEAROOMS
Glasgow, United Kingdom
LINCOLN CATHEDRAL
London, United Kingdom
MOGGERHANGER HOUSE
Bedfordshire, United Kingdom
Sir John Soane (1753–1837) is one of the most original neoclassical architects, ranked alongside Nicholas Hawsmoor and Alexander “Greek” Thomson.
SAINT BARTHOLOMEW’S HOSPITAL
London, United Kingdom
SAINT FRANCIS AND GORTON CHURCH AND MONASTERY
East Manchester, United Kingdom
Edward Pugin’s Saint Francis and Gorton Church and Monastery in Gorton, Manchester is recognized as a masterpiece of Victorian Gothic architecture.
SAINT GEORGE’S HALL
Liverpool, United Kingdom
SAINT MARY’S CHURCH IN THORNHAM PARVA
United Kingdom
SAINT MARY’S STOW CHURCH
Stow, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom
St. Mary’s Church in Stow is one of the oldest parish churches in England. Founded in the seventh century in what had been the Roman town of Sidnacester, St.
SAINT PAUL’S CATHEDRAL
London, United Kingdom
A cathedral dedicated to the Apostle Paul has existed in London since 604 AD. The medieval cathedral was destroyed in the Great Fire of 1666.
SAINT VINCENT STREET CHURCH
Glasgow, United Kingdom
Saint Vincent Street Church is the sole survivor of three churches designed for the city of Glasgow by the influential and renowned Scottish architect Alexander Thomson.
SELBY ABBEY
Selby, United Kingdom
Although Selby Abbey is now a parish church, it was one of England’s great monastic churches, built on a grand scale and to a high level of architectural and artistic mastery
ST. GEORGE’S BLOOMSBURY
London, United Kingdom
Nicholas Hawksmoor, protégé of Sir Christopher Wren, built six churches resulting from the 1711 Act of Parliament, which demanded 50 new churches in London. St.
STOWE HOUSE
Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom
Stowe House was originally the country seat of the Temple-Grenville family. The first house on its footprint was built between 1677 and 1683 for the third baronet, Sir Richard Temple.
STRAWBERRY HILL
Twickenham, United Kingdom
As the first true Gothic Revival structure in Europe, Strawberry Hill seamlessly blended landscape design, architecture, and decorative arts to forge a new direction in 18th century design and cult
TOMB OF VISCOUNT CAMPDEN AT EXTON CHURCH
Exton, Rutland, United Kingdom
The Church of St. Peter and St. Paul in Exton,Rutland, is of great significance for its fine collection of funerary monuments, some of which are of national significance.
WENTWORTH CASTLE
Yorkshire, United Kingdom
WESTMINSTER ABBEY SEDILIA
London, United Kingdom
It is remarkable that the sedilia of Westminster Abbey has survived for so long.
WINCHESTER CATHEDRAL
Winchester, United Kingdom
United States
A. CONGER GOODYEAR HOUSE
Old Westbury, New York, United States
When the A. Conger Goodyear House was completed in 1938, Edward Durell Stone was already well-known as one of the country’s leading architects working in the International Style.
ADOBE MISSIONS OF NEW MEXICO
Various, New Mexico, United States
The adobe churches of New Mexico were built as part of the Franciscan missionary campaign in the New World.
CHURCH OF ST. ANN AND THE HOLY TRINITY
Brooklyn, New York, United States
The Church of St. Ann and the Holy Trinity is one of the most important monuments of the Gothic Revival in America.
DUTCH REFORMED CHURCH
Newburgh, New York, United States
Built between 1835 and 1837, the Dutch Reformed Church in Newburgh, New York, sits on a bluff overlooking the Hudson River and is a reminder of the wealth that came early to settlements in New York
ELLIS ISLAND
New York Harbor, New York & New Jersey, United States
Ellis Island in New York Harbor was the principle point of entry for immigrants to America from 1892 until 1924, during which period an estimated 12 million people were processed.
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
Lakeland, Florida, United States
Located on a hillside overlooking Lake Hollingsworth, Florida Southern College contains the largest collection of Frank Lloyd Wright buildings in the world.
FORT APACHE
Apache Tribal Lands, United States
Established by President Grant in 1871, the 7,500-acre Fort Apache Reservation served as operations base from which the U.S.
GOLDEN GATE PARK CONSERVATORY OF FLOWERS
San Francisco, California, United States
The Conservatory of Flowers is the oldest surviving structure in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park, and one of only a few large Victorian greenhouses in the United States.
GULF COAST AND NEW ORLEANS
Mississippi and Louisiana, United States
HISTORIC LOWER MANHATTAN
New York, New York, United States
In 1625, Dutch settlers founded New Amsterdam on a stretch of land that would eventually grow into one of the world’s most famous and populous cities.
HISTORIC ROUTE 66
Chicago, IL, to Los Angeles, CA, United States
Route 66, once the primary highway from America’s interior to the West Coast, has played a now-legendary role in U.S. history since its designation in 1926.
HOLY ASCENSION RUSSIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH
Unalaska, Alaska, United States
Built in 1896 on the site of an earlier church, Holy Ascension Russian Orthodox Church in Unalaska is a reminder of the sizeable Russian community that once thrived in Alaska.
HOLY CROSS NEIGHBORHOOD OF THE NINTH WARD
New Orleans, United States
LAFAYETTE CEMETERY NO. 1
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
One of New Orleans’s oldest surviving cemeteries, Lafayette Cemetery No. 1 was placed on the Watch in 1996 because of its advanced state of deterioration.
LAFAYETTE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Brooklyn, United States
LANCASTER COUNTY
Pennsylvania, United States
The green fields of Lancaster County in southeastern Pennsylvania constitute a historic cultural landscape representing the founding ideals of the United States of America.
MAIN STREET MODERN: GROSSE POINTE LIBRARY
Grosse Point, United States
MAIN STREET MODERN: RIVERVIEW HIGH SCHOOL
Sarasota, Florida, United States
Designed by Paul Rudolph (1918-1997), Riverview High School first welcomed students in 1958.
MESA VERDE NATIONAL PARK
Montezuma County, Colorado, United States
Mesa Verde, a large, gently sloping plateau etched with deep canyons, was occupied by the Ancestral Puebloan civilization between the 6th and 13th centuries AD.
MIAMI MARINE STADIUM
Miami, Florida, United States
Commodore Ralph Middleton Munroe Miami Marine Stadium was the first purpose-built venue for powerboat racing in the United States.
MIDDLETON-PINCKNEY HOUSE
Charleston SC, United States
MOUNT LEBANON SHAKER VILLAGE
New Lebanon, New York, United States
At its height in 1860, the Shaker village of Mount Lebanon, New York, spanned some 6,000 acres and contained more than 100 buildings.
NEW YORK STUDIO SCHOOL OF DRAWING, PAINTING AND SCULPTURE
New York, New York, United States
The New York Studio School of Drawing, Painting, and Sculpture is located in New York’s Greenwich Village, in a complex of structures assembled over an extended period of time by the American sculptor
OLANA STATE HISTORIC SITE
Greenport/Hudson, New York, United States
Olana, the famed home of Frederic Edwin Church, the nineteenth-century American landscape painter and a central figure in the Hudson River School.
PRESERVATION ARTS TRAINING WILLIAMSBURG HIGH SCHOOL
Brooklyn, New York, United States
As part of a long term commitment to preservation training in the United States, WMF initiated a high school preservation arts training curriculum, launched as a result of a 1993 workshop for educa
SAINT DAVID’S SCHOOL
NY, United States
Saint David’s School is an elementary school for boys located in the Upper East Side of Manhattan, in New York.
SAN ESTEBAN DEL REY MISSION
Acoma Pueblo, United States
SAN JOSE CHURCH
Old San Juan, Puerto Rico, United States
The San José Church, originally known as the Iglesia de Santo Tomás de Aquino, is considered by many scholars to be one of the finest and oldest examples of Gothic-influenced religiou
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO MISSION
San Juan Capistrano, California, United States
The expansive San Juan Capistrano Mission was initially a small adobe chapel when it was established by Padre Junípero Serra on November 1, 1776.
TAOS PUEBLO
Taos Pueblo, New Mexico, United States
Situated in the sun-baked valley of a Rio Grande tributary and continuously inhabited for 1,000 years, the community and architecture of Taos Pueblo exemplify the enduring spirit of the Pueblo peop
TREE STUDIOS AND MEDINAH TEMPLE
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Commissioned by philanthropist Judge Lambert Tree, the Tree Studios were designed as an artists’ residence by the Parfitt Brothers architectural firm.
TUTUVENI PETROGLYPH SITE
Hopi Tribal Land, United States
The Tutuveni Petroglyph site boasts more than 5,000 Hopi clan symbols that were inscribed during the ceremonial pilgrimage to Ongtupqa, or the Grand Canyon
Venezuela
LA GUAIRA HISTORIC CENTER
La Guaira, Venezuela
The historic city of La Guaira was founded in the 16th century on the Caribbean Sea and served as the chief port for Venezuela’s future inland capital Caracas.
SAN FRANCISCO CHURCH IN CORO
Coro, Falcón, Venezuela
Among the first churches that the Franciscan Order founded in Venezuela, the original church at Coro was part of the Convent of Nuestra Señora de la Salceda, founded in 1614.
Vietnam
MINH MANG TOMB
Hué City, Huong Tho Village, Vietnam
King Minh Mang, the second ruler of the Nguyen Dynasty, governed southern and central Vietnam from 1820 to 1840.
MY SON TEMPLE DISTRICT
My Son, Quảng Nam-Ḍà Nẵng, Tỉnh , Vietnam
My Son, an architectural complex on the coast of Vietnam, was the spiritual and political capital of the Cham people (the Champa Kingdom).
TA TUNG TU, MINH MANG TOMB
Hué City, Huong Tho Village, Vietnam
Emperor Minh Mạng (1820-1841), the second ruler of the Nguyễn Dynasty, ruled southern and central Vietnam from 1820 to 1841.
Zimbabwe
KHAMI NATIONAL MONUMENT
Bulawayo, Zimbabwe
Khami, a settlement founded in the mid-15th century, became the capital city of Great Zimbabwe in the mid-16th century and thus became the center of the kingdom’s political and economic power