10 Historic Homes You Can Virtually Tour
Our list ranges from Buckingham Palace to the Frida Kahlo Museum to the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.
Buckingham Palace, London, England
If you’ve ever wanted to see how the Queen of England lives without having to leave your house, now is your moment. Since 1837, Buckingham Palace has been the official London home to the monarchy of the United Kingdom. Although the palace is still Queen Elizabeth’s primary residence, the State Rooms are available to visit every year during the summer. In total, Buckingham Palace has 775 rooms, 19 of which are State Rooms, 188 rooms are staff bedrooms, 52 are guest and Royal bedrooms, 78 are bathrooms, and 92 are offices.
Vizcaya Museum and Gardens, Miami, FL
Vizcaya is a Mediterranean Revival-style villa with Baroque elements that was once the home of businessman James Deering. The estate currently consists of 43 acres, but was previously located on an impressive 180 acres. It took eight years and $15 million to build the villa, and another year to complete the Italian Renaissance-style gardens and Vizcaya Village, which consists of 11 buildings across 12 acres, including greenhouses, fields, staff quarters, a garage, barns, and workshops.
The Frick Collection, New York, NY
This Beaux Arts-style mansion located on the Upper East Side of Manhattan was once home to Henry Clay Frick, one of the most prominent industrialists during the Gilded Age. Expect to see Old Masters paintings, decorative arts, and European sculptures in this former residence turned art museum. The Frick Collection is located on Fifth Avenue and is one of the last remaining Gilded Age mansions in New York City. It became a museum in 1935, and since then, the public has been able view Frick’s expansive collection of artwork, which includes Rembrandt, Gainsborough, Whistler, Bellini, Vermeer, and Goya, to name a few.
Monticello, Charlottesville, VA
At just 26 years old, future President Thomas Jefferson inherited a plantation in rural Virginia. An architecture enthusiast, Jefferson himself devised a combination of Neoclassical and Palladian architecture for the estate that would come to be known as Monticello. It is now a National Historic Landmark, and, along with the University of Virginia—which was also one of Jefferson’s designs—a UNESCO World Heritage Site. If Monticello looks familiar to you, it’s probably because it’s on the reserve side of the nickel.
Frida Kahlo Museum, Mexico City, Mexico
In 1958, just four years after Frida Kahlo’s death, her eye-catching, bright blue house in Mexico City became a museum. Not only was Frida Kahlo born and raised in this historic home, it was also where she lived with her husband and fellow painter, Diego Rivera, and later, where she passed away. Diego Rivera donated the house in 1957 so that it could be turned into a museum in honor of his late wife. Kahlo’s house has since been operating as both a historic house museum and an art museum for over 60 years, and it is now the most visited museum in Coyoacán. Artworks by both Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera are on display in the home.
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, MA
The onetime home of Isabella Stewart Gardner was built in 1903 and is a designated Boston Landmark. As is evident when looking at the home's Instagramable courtyard, the building was inspired by a 15th-century Venetian palace. Isabella Stewart Gardner once said that she wanted her extensive art collection to be exhibited “for the education and enjoyment of the public forever.” Well, so far, so good! The museum is home to American, Asian, and European art, including paintings, tapestries, sculptures, and decorative arts.
Lyndhurst Mansion, Tarrytown, NY
This spooky Gothic Revival mansion, built in 1838, was once the home of railroad tycoon Jay Gould. It sits on 67 acres and overlooks the Hudson River. The National Historic Landmark home was used as a filming location for The Blacklist, Project Runway, House of Dark Shadows, and Night of Dark Shadows, to name a few. Former owner Jay Gould had a 243-foot yacht built so that he didn’t have to take the nearby railroad built by his archnemesis, Cornelius Vanderbilt. Talk about rich people problems...
Mount Vernon, Mount Vernon, VA
Mount Vernon began as a one-and-a-half story home built by George Washington’s father, Augustine, in 1734. It went on to become the plantation of George and Martha Washington, the first President and First Lady of the United States of America. The architectural style of the home is described as loose Palladian, which is a European style inspired by Ancient Greek and Roman structures. Mount Vernon was expanded twice during George Washington’s lifetime, in the late 1750s and in the 1770s, and it was his home until his death in 1799. In 1858, the Mount Vernon Ladies’ Association acquired the historic home and saved it from ruin by restoring it.
The Mark Twain House, Hartford, CT
Mark Twain (real name: Samuel Langhorne Clemens) lived with his family in this Victorian Gothic-style home from 1874 to 1891. This is where Mark Twain wrote novels like The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, The Prince and the Pauper, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, Life on the Mississippi, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court, and A Tramp Abroad. It was Mark Twain and Charles Dudley who coined the term “Gilded Age,” given the title of their 1873 novel, The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today. Events held at the home have included appearances by fellow novelists Judy Blume, Stephen King, and John Grisham.
Blenheim Palace, Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England
To end this list with a bang, look no further than Blenheim Palace, the former home of Consuelo Vanderbilt and her husband, the ninth Duke of Marlborough. It was the $2.5 million dowry of Consuelo’s father, William Kissam Vanderbilt—which translates to $76.8 million today—that made the restoration of this historic palace possible. Blenheim Palace has been used as a filming location for a variety of films, including Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, Gulliver's Travels, Cinderella, Spectre, Orlando, Transformers: The Last Knight, Dolittle , and Hamlet . It was also the birthplace of Sir Winston Churchill.
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19 Virtual Tours of Famous Homes
©TripAdvisor
Explore Homes From Home
Even if you feel trapped at home, it's possible to get away and even travel to fabulous, famous houses and castles all across the world — using your computer and a little imagination. And when stay-at-home orders are lifted? Consider checking out even more famous homes , some of which you might remember from the movies . Here are some famous homes you can visit just by firing up the computer and logging on. Most tours are free or far cheaper than visiting in person.
Related: 18 National Park Webcams Where You Can See the Wilderness from Home
Mark Twain House | Hartford, Connecticut
Take the virtual tour here The esteemed humorist spent his most prolific years working and living in Connecticut. He and wife Ivey moved into the house in 1874, but poor investments forced them to relocate to Europe in 1891. Still, this was his favorite home, and more recently it's been restored right down to the nursery where his children grew up as well as the book-lined rooms where Twain wrote his most famous works, including "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer," "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court," and "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn."
Mount Vernon | Virginia
Take the virtual tour here Just 13 miles south of Washington, D.C., sits the bucolic estate of George and Martha Washington. The extensive online tour shows the expansion from responsibly-sized home to mansion, and explains details such as the process of rustication, by which Washington directed his manager to create a beveled wood exterior that looks like stone. Those needing a nature escape will want to follow the arrows toward the East Piazza, which overlooks the Potomac River all the way to the Maryland shore. Note: Other than a discussion of a painting, there is notably little attention paid to the slaves who were kept on the property.
Paisley Park | Chanhassen, Minnesota
Take the virtual tour here Six months after his death, Prince's estate opened for public tours. You can explore in 360 degrees the recording studio, rehearsal studio, editing room, and grand entrance where the great musician not only recorded his own prolific output, but also produced other artists such as Sheila E., George Clinton, and Mavis Staples. Sadly, a tour of the closet is not included.
Molly Brown House Museum | Denver
Take the virtual tours here Perhaps you'd prefer a tour guide on your virtual visit? The Molly Brown House Museum offers narrated videos taking you on a tour of the house belonging to this Denver legend. Born in Missouri, Brown struck out with her brothers for Leadville, Colorado. She and her husband made good in mining and bought an 1887 stone mansion in Denver. Years later, she gained fame as a Titanic survivor who demanded her lifeboat return to look for the survivors. After your virtual tour, enjoy Debbie Reynolds in the musical "The Unsinkable Molly Brown," available for streaming on several sites.
Biltmore Estate | Asheville, North Carolina
Take the virtual tours here For more than half a century, visitors have flocked to tours of the largest privately-owned home in the United States, originally built in the 1890s for George Vanderbilt II. On the Biltmore website , you can visit a few of the more than 30 acres of gardens designed by the great Frederick Law Olmstead. Don't miss this YouTube video for a "Downton Abbey"-style tour of the recently opened upper floors, including the linen closet.
Ca D'Zan | Sarasota, Florida
Take the virtual tour here You wouldn't expect a circus impresario to have a garden-variety house, and with its outlandish Venetian Gothic architecture, the 1924 mansion of John Ringling doesn't disappoint. The Ringlings entertained luminaries such as Will Rogers in the 36,000-square-foot waterfront building. This is the rare tour that offers a glimpse of the private quarters. Look elsewhere on the site for tours of the Asolo Theatre, the circus school and the Ringling Museum of Art.
Monticello | Charlottesville. Virginia
Take the virtual tour here With an online tour of Monticello, you can explore the neoclassical architectural designs of the third U.S. president, Thomas Jefferson. The main house on Jefferson's plantation, Monticello reveals his neoclassical architectural plan. Its decor features a mix of American history and the decor he collected while ambassador to France. Examine such innovations as a wine dumbwaiter and revolving service doors, as well as triple-sash windows that could convert into doorways. The tour also allows a peek at the Hemmings cabin on Mulberry Row, where slaves were housed out of sight of the main mansion.
Winchester Mystery House | San Jose, California
Take the virtual tour here Shortly after her husband's death in 1881, Sarah Winchester, heir to the rifle fortune, moved to California. She immediately began expanding an 8-room farmhouse into the 24,000-square-foot mansion that today draws tourists both for its extravagance and for the mystery of how it came to be. Legends abound of it being haunted, but even non-believers will be drawn into this behemoth built without a master plan, resulting in unevenly spaced stairs, interior windows, and dead-end doors and staircases. (Immersive 360-degree tour is $9 for unlimited access; the video tour is available for $6 for 72-hour rental or $14 to buy.)
Buckingham Palace | London
Take the virtual tour here You will not get to see the queen's bedroom, or any of the other 188 staff bedrooms and 52 royal and guest bedrooms. Nor will you see the 78 bathrooms in the Neoclassical building, which has been the royal residence since Queen Victoria. However, you can virtually wander through the gilt-and-carmine Throne Room, climb the Grand Staircase, and sip some tea (virtually, of course) while in the White Drawing Room.
Iolani Palace | Honolulu, Hawaii
Take the virtual tour here A source of pride and grief for Native Hawaiians, this 1879 estate was the official royal residence of Hawaii until it became a prison for Queen Liliuokalani. Her attempts to strengthen the monarchy led to her being overthrown in 1893 by American sympathizers and, finally, the U.S. Marines. She was imprisoned in the palace for one year until she was pardoned, living the rest of her life as a private citizen. A 3D self-guided online tour reveals the grand staircase and piano, both made of native koa wood.
Frick Collection | New York
Take the virtual tour here Built in the pre-income tax Gilded Age, the 1914 Henry Clay Frick mansion is on the still-ritzy Upper East Side of New York. Today it serves as a museum housing Frick's sizable collection of Old Master paintings and fine furniture. While examining masterworks by Vermeer and Fragonard online, you can also take in 360-degree views of the house and its gardens and imagine how the other 1 percent lived.
Eustis Estate | Milton, Massachusetts
Take the virtual tour here Travel back to a gentler era — at least, gentler for the wealthy — by visiting the 1878 home of William Ellery Channing Eustis. The house reflects several architectural styles and was built from local stone with red and yellow brick accents and a red-tiled roof. Fans of woodworking will enjoy the detailed carvings throughout the house. Today, they reflect the warmth of natural wood, but originally were painted white. The kitchen features the latest conveniences, including a new-at-the-time stove, a dumbwaiter, speaking tubes and an in-house telephone.
Versailles | France
Take the virtual tours here No one ever said Versailles was subtle. The formerly modest French chateau was expanded into the opulent royal residence for those pompadoured kings, Louis XIV and Louis XVI. The living was good, if not particularly subtle, until intellectuals had enough and sent Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette to the guillotine in 1793. You can tour the palace and its enormous gardens online or download the VR app.
The Elms | Newport, Rhode Island
Take the virtual tours here The summer playground of the Gilded Age is rife with American palaces, including the stone behemoth of Philadelphia coal baron Edward Julius Berwind. The Elms was modeled after an 18th-century French chateau and completed in 1901. The home and furnishings were designed by a French firm, and the art collection includes a painting by John Singer Sargent. On the website, you can tour three other Newport mansions, although the most famous, the Breakers, is not available.
J.P. Morgan Library | New York
Take the virtual tour here Designed by Charles McKim in 1903 to hold the financier's massive library, this stone building originally stood next to Morgan's home, since destroyed. This is no ordinary library, though. Outside, a facade of Tennessee marble and sculpted lions show just how seriously Morgan expected to be taken. Inside, the ornately decorated library shows off an enormous medieval tapestry, stone fireplace, and books rising three stories high. The collection includes multiple medieval and Renaissance illuminated manuscripts, including the 13th-century Morgan Bible, three Gutenberg Bibles, and many original manuscripts and drafts by artists and writers from Honore de Balzac to Bob Dylan.
The Glass House | New Canaan, Connecticut
Take the virtual tour here he great modernist architect Philip Johnson based his 1949 home is a national landmark for its early industrial style. Johnson was influenced by the Farnsworth House, and his personal home reflects the nature surrounding its lush New England setting. The rectangular prism is an open space, punctuated only by the brick fireplace (and bathroom) column in the middle.
Casa Azul | Coyoacan, Mexico
Take the virtual tour here In an elegant suburb of Mexico City sits the home where painter Frida Kahlo was born and died. The online tour takes visitors through nearly every room of the house as well as the gardens. Kahlo spent much of her life in pain as the result of a streetcar accident, and the home shows the set-up engineered to allow her to paint on her back in bed.
Glessner House | Chicago
Take the virtual tour here Designed by architect Henry Hobson Richard and completed in 1886, Glessner House represents a break from traditional Victorian architecture, and inspired modern architects including Louis Sullivan, Mies van der Rohe, and Frank Lloyd Wright. The virtual tour takes you throughout the hulking granite-clad building, even going so far as Mrs. Glessner's dressing room.
Betsy Ross House | Philadelphia
Take the virtual tour here Both Betsy Ross and her home are subject to dispute, as historians suggest that she did not sew the original flag, and that this may, in fact, not have been her home. Still, this 360-degree tour gives viewers a close look at a modest Colonial home. In there, you can see the Delft tile fireplace in her tiny parlor, with pride of place given to the walnut chest inherited by Betsy from her father.
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12 Historic Homes You Can Tour from Your Couch
By Steph Coelho
Posted on May 4, 2020 9:05 PM EDT
0 minute read
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Take a Peek at History
istockphoto.com
Thanks to technological advances, it’s now easier than ever to travel the world from the comfort of your own home. Video tours and 3-D virtual technology let you tour beautiful historic homes throughout the world, exploring every nook and cranny. Escape the confines of your four walls to delight in interiors that are steeped in history and only a click away.
Pittock Mansion
Wikimedia Commons via Tiptoety
The Pittock Mansion in Portland, Oregon, was once home to Henry Pittock, who became publisher of The Oregonian newspaper in 1860 and went on to found a financial empire. The French Renaissance-style mansion, completed in 1914, was designed by Edward T. Foulkes, an architect who trained at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. At Pittock’s insistence, the home was packed with the latest technology, including thermostat-controlled central heating, indirect electric lighting, and a central vacuum system. Today, the 16,000-square-foot mansion serves as a museum and gallery space. While the museum is closed, visitors are welcome to explore the interior and grounds via an impressive virtual tour .
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Mount Vernon Estate
The Mount Vernon Estate, the former home of George Washington, is one of the most popular historical attractions in Virginia. While the current state of the world makes it impossible for you to wander in the footsteps of our first president, you can easily check out his estate online. The virtual tour of Mount Vernon offers panoramic views of the gardens and 360-degree views of the mansion’s interiors. Visitors can click on points of interest to learn more about the history, architecture, and decor of this national treasure.
Anne Frank House
A variety of virtual exhibits are available for those who want to learn more about Anne Frank, her diary, and the secret annex in Amsterdam that sheltered her family, along with five other individuals, for more than two years during World War II. Online resources include YouTube video diaries, virtual tours of the secret annex, a 360-degree tour of the home where the Franks lived before they went into hiding, and more.
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Mark Twain House
If you’re itching for a bit of literary history, check out the Mark Twain House and Museum online . Explore the interior of the High Victorian Gothic home through room-by-room photos or via an immersive, richly annotated 360-degree tour. Whichever approach you choose, you’ll gain an appreciation of the great American writer and the beloved home where he spent his happiest years.
Frank Lloyd Wright Houses
Architecture aficionados can now enjoy unusual virtual access to a number of the renowned architect’s masterpieces. In response to pandemic lockdown measures, a social media project dubbed #WrightVirtualVisits launched at the beginning of April. Organizations participating in the initiative have been posting short tour videos of Wright-designed houses— 12 homes in total .
Lyndhurst Mansion
While the grounds of this Gothic Revival mansion in Tarrytown, New York, are open for socially distant visits, those who wish to see the interior can do so only virtually. Built in 1838 and expanded by its second owner, Lyndhurst had a number of occupants, including railroad magnate Jay Gould. Because the property was often used as a summer home, the estate’s collection of art and antiques has remained largely intact and is in excellent condition. Available virtual tours include an aerial view of Lyndhurst , a traditional 360-degree walk-through, a festive tour of the interiors dressed up for the holidays, and—certainly the creepiest tour on this list—a peek at the mansion during the Halloween season, complete with ghoulish inhabitants.
Related: On the Waterfront: 10 Tiny Lake Houses
Gropius House
flickr.com via Ken Schwarz
Soon after Bauhaus founder Walter Gropius accepted an appointment to Harvard in 1937, he decided to build a home for his family in nearby Lincoln, Massachusetts. That home, Lincoln House , was designed according to Bauhaus principles and is now filled with furniture and decorative items from the era. Beautiful photography and abundant text let virtual visitors explore the house and learn about the influential architect and his social milieu.
Mabry-Hazen House
Wikimedia Commons via Brian Stansberry
This historic home in Knoxville, Tennessee, built in 1858, sheltered three generations of the same family. Today, it is filled to the brim with original furniture and mementos—more than 2,000 artifacts in all. Because of recent closures, the museum is now offering video field trips that let visitors get up close and personal with various objects and historical documents housed within the museum’s walls.
Related: Take a Peek Inside 11 Charming Carriage Houses
Lexington Historical Society
flickr.com via Massachusetts Office of Travel & Tourism
The Lexington Historical Society offers virtual tours of three properties, including Buckman Tavern, the Hancock-Clarke House, and Munroe Tavern. The tours are accessible via almost any platform. The taverns, built in 1710 and 1735, respectively, were important meeting places for locals and travelers, and played important roles in the Battle of Lexington and Concord. The Hancock-Clarke house, home to Reverend Jonas Clarke, played host to both John Hancock and Samuel Adams in the days before the battle.
Whitehern House & Garden
flickr.com via Can Pac Swire
Head to Hamilton, Ontario (virtually, of course), to take a 3-D tour of this walled Georgian-style estate, built around 1850, which housed three generations of the McQuesten family. Each stage of the tour is accompanied by informative narration that provides a deeper learning experience. You can even choose to exit the house and explore the enclosed garden and terrace.
Winchester Mystery House
For a nominal rental fee (or a purchase price of $13.99), you can get access to a video tour of the famous Winchester Mystery House. Those interested in a deeper exploration can also access an immersive 360-degree tour for $8.99. This San Jose, California, landmark is known for its weird and wacky architecture. The sprawling structure boasts 2,000 doors, 160 rooms, and a whopping 17 chimneys! In 2008, Time Magazine included the house in a list of top 10 haunted places.
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15 Best INTERACTIVE Virtual Tours of HISTORIC SITES
Eager to explore the world? So am I! I started going on a bunch of virtual tours of famous places and loved them so much that I thought I’d share my favorites with you. Here are the 15 BEST virtual tours of historic sites around the world. ALL are interactive 360 videos or photos. These top tourist destinations will wow you!
This post is part of a best-of series of virtual tours. Find more incredible virtual tours , including national parks and waterfalls around the world, wildlife encounters, awesome cities, and crazy adventure travel.
Historic sites make for the best museums and the best storytellers, hey? By simply standing in a room or overlooking the ruins of days past, you’re immediately transported to another time. Another person’s experiences. And these interactive virtual tours take you right there … past the throngs of tourists and face to face with history. I hope you find these virtual tours of historic sites as inspiring as I do!
Now, if you don’t see the historic site virtual tour you’re looking for, continue to the Summary and Resources section at the bottom. There you’ll find links to more virtual tours of historic sites and other amazing tourist destinations.
As you read through this list, start creating your travel bucket list … you’ll feel very productive getting all that drooling down in ONE place.
Or, go ahead and plan your next trip . (Or a few … I have!)
This is my list of the best virtual tours of historic sites out there. Enjoy!
1. Xian Warriors Historic Site Virtual Tour (China)
Oh. My. Goodness. Let’s start this list of the BEST virtual tours of historic sites with one incredible famous place.
Even in Chinese, this Xian Warriors virtual tour is AMAZING. Jump down from the tourist walkways to “walk” among the 8,000 some warriors and hundreds of chariots and horses, all in battle position. Zoom in to see traces of colorful paint on their unique expressions. Pan around to the rock and ponder what lies beyond.
This massive mausoleum was created around 210 B.C. All of this was to protect China’s first emperor, Qin Shi Huang, in the afterlife. WOW.
2. Great Wall of China Virtual Tour (China)
Here’s another top tourist destination in China. Given how famous the Great Wall of China is, it isn’t surprising that you can find a few virtual tours. AirPano’s Great Wall of China virtual tour is my favorite.
Start at Dragon’s Head and click on the informational markers to learn more about this famous place. Move up the incredible climb at Sky Stairs. Enjoy incredible aerial views of destroyed towers and pan around to the great mountain ranges surrounding you. And “look” down to the incredible, ancient wall ruins beneath your feet.
Want more of China? Explore The Forbidden City and Hong Kong in virtual tours of cities , and the Avatar mountains in virtual tours of national parks !
3. Angkor Wat Historic Site Virtual Tour (Cambodia)
Cambodia’s Angkor Wat complex is incredible . It’s one of my happy places, and was a must for this list of best virtual tours of historic sites.
The Angkor Wat virtual tour from Google Maps Street View is pretty great. Explore a number of the Angkor Wat temples and learn a bit about them through the information icons. There’s a bit of a glitch when I try to zoom in with my mouse, but the +/- buttons work.
If you’d prefer a video tour of Angkor Wat, check out this 360 video virtual tour from VR Gorilla. They walk you through a few of the temples, take you on a boat tour past floating villages, and then give you a taste of Siem Reap’s night life.
Interested in Cambodia? Check out my related articles:
- Experiencing Cambodia’s Genocide Sites
- Donating Blood in Cambodia
- 5 Trusted Charities in SE Asia Every Tourist Should Visit
4. The White House Virtual Tour (United States)
Okay. Let’s jump aaaall the way across the Pacific Ocean to the most famous home in the world: the White House. Google Maps takes us inside this top tourist destination with the White House virtual tour . Sadly, it only includes the public rooms on the main floor. I was really curious about the stairs heading down, but no luck. This virtual tour is pretty basic, but the location is pretty cool to make the list of best virtual tours of historic sites.
Don’t think this is cool enough? How about 360-degree videos of Washington DC’s top tourist destinations ? Open these up in your YouTube app and have fun!
You may also like Hotels for Romantic Getaways in USA
Interested in getting a CHEAP VR headset? Check out Google Cardboard!
5. Anne Frank’s House Virtual Tour (Netherlands)
Now we’ll jump again … over the Atlantic Ocean for virtual tours of historic sites in EUROPE.
And my goodness, this historic site virtual tour is such a treasure. The Anne Frank House virtual tour takes you into the house to see what their lives looked like before and during the Second World War. Climb up to the bookshelf that disguises the Secret Annex. This is where the young girl lived for more than two years, before being discovered. She was sent to the concentration camp, where she died.
Wander through the Anne Frank House virtual tour online. Or, download the free virtual reality app for a more intimate virtual tour of this historic site.
6. Palace of Versailles Virtual Tour (France)
WOW. The Palace of Versailles is certainly among the most grand palaces in the world. And now Google Arts and Culture takes you on a Palace of Versailles virtual tour ! Stroll along the stunning Hall of Mirrors tucked in between the War Room and Peace Room (use the Street View in the link above to enter the side rooms). Don’t forget to look UP!
Then check out the Royal Opera and wander through the gardens. Videos help round out this incredible historic site virtual tour.
7. Prague Castle Virtual Tour (Czech Republic)
The Prague Castle virtual tour takes you up the hill overlooking the most beautiful city in the world. There are lots of 360-degree images to fall in love with, making this one of the best virtual tours of historic sites!
Explore the gardens and courtyards. Pan up to the buildings towering all around you and zoom in for more detail. Make yourself dizzy spinning in circles under St Vitus Cathedral’s stained glass windows or the Old Royal Palace ceiling. Enjoy the views from the East Gate and Southern Gardens. It’s too bad they didn’t include the view from the steps near Hradcany Square.
Even wandering through the Prague Castle virtual tour leaves me turned around. This is one of the things I really didn’t like when visiting Prague . If you’re planning a real-life visit to this famous place, study the map!
8. Vatican Museum Virtual Tour (Italy)
Have you dreamed of seeing the Vatican’s stunning rooms for yourself? The Vatican Museum virtual tour takes you through Sistine Chapel and Raphael’s Rooms, along with other incredible halls and museums. When I took a tour of this famous place in person, I fell in love with Raphael’s Rooms. Can you find him watching you wherever you stand? He’s in all of his rooms. (Like a much more sophisticated Where’s Waldo!)
Just standing on the doorstep looking into the Sistine Chapel is spectacular. Pan up, spin around and zoom in for a closer look of everything that intrigues you. It’ll be a LOT! The only negative to having it all to yourself? No audio, at least what I could find.
Note: The Vatican Museum virtual tour is compatible with WebVR. So put on a virtual reality headset for an even more epic historic site virtual tour!
9. Roman Colosseum Virtual Tour (Italy)
One of the most stunning architectural feats of its time, and one of the most gut-wrenching historical sites to visit in person. In nearly 400 years of providing “entertainment,” it’s estimated that nearly 400,000 people died here. Plus almost 1 million animals.
Courtesy of Google Maps, the Roman Colosseum virtual tour takes you inside this top tourist destination. Although you can’t sit on the crumbling steps and absorb the heavy atmosphere, you can “walk” around the public areas and imagine what it would’ve been like. Thundering with cheers and chants of the crowd, lion roars and screams cut short.
A list of best virtual tours of historic sites wouldn’t be complete without the Roman Colosseum.
Want more of Italy? Check out inspiring virtual tours of cities ! Naples, Pompeii … Old Town Taormina in Messina. WOW.
10. Acropolis Virtual Tour (Greece)
Now how about a trek out to Greece? The Acropolis virtual tour takes you up the ancient steps to this historic site overlooking Athens. Not all images give you 360-degree views and some of my favorite real-life views are missing, but it’s still the Acropolis. And there are detailed descriptions with each image … in English, yay! You also get to see it lit up at night.
My favorite real-life and virtual view from this historic site is looking back over your shoulder as you climb up. Can you find Mars Hill? Step carefully on the uneven paths, especially as you near the East Facade of the Parthenon. And take a deep breath as you gaze out over Athens from the Parthenon Through Time spot (near the West Facade).
But I must confess that I found the Acropolis virtual tour a bit frustrating to navigate. Instead of finding a “next” button, I kept going back to the map. But, the detailed descriptions and zooming function still make it fun, and one of the best virtual tours of historic sites you should check out.
11. Holy Land Historic Sites Virtual Tour (Israel/Palestine)
The Holy Land virtual tour takes you through a long list of 45 amazing historic sites. With so many famous places, I found it a little overwhelming. But if you know where you want to go, choose from the drop-down menu (top center) or images (top left).
The Holy Land virtual tour of historic sites is SO insightful. Bright, colorful churches. Lovely architecture. Vivid colors of the River Jordan. I was surprised by how tall the wailing wall is. You can almost imagine walking those sandy stone paths and running your hand along the stone walls. And feeling the Dead Sea mud squishing through your toes!
12. Petra Virtual Tour (Jordan)
Ahhh … yes!! You HAVE to check out the Petra virtual tour from Google Maps. Definitely one of the BEST virtual tours of historic sites out there.
Start your Petra virtual tour at the gateway, and wander all the way into the famous monastery at the end. Google’s Street View gives you an audio tour, ambient sounds of the area, and informational icons to learn more. Pan around and move along the path’s arrows (but you can’t zoom in). Climb up the sandy rock steps, gaze down at the desert canyon below and wander in and out of ancient temples.
My only complaint is that I can’t figure out how to stand back from the monastery for that classic photo op. Or find a camel. Can you?
13. Pharaoh Ramesses VI Tomb Virtual Tour (Egypt)
Okay, this site is very cool. Check out the Pharaoh Ramesses VI Tomb virtual tour . It takes you along a beautiful, ornately decorated tunnel into a room dedicated to Pharaoh Ramesses VI. Step over the railing to look closer at the broken tomb and hieroglyphics on the wall. SO. COOL.
Now, you can also take a virtual tour of the Pyramids . You’d think it’d have to be one of the best virtual tours of historic sites, right? But I found Google Maps’ Street View virtual tour disappointing. I couldn’t figure out how to get inside! (If you know the trick, please share in the comments!)
14. Taj Mahal Virtual Tour (India)
Here’s another incredible historic site to explore online. The Taj Mahal virtual tour takes you around the grounds and inside this top tourist destination. You can pan around and zoom in for a closer look. Listen to videos for information on various pieces. And the views of the gardens and Yamuna River are wonderful.
But I’m sad to report that the Taj Mahal virtual tour has disappointing limitations. You can’t pan up to look at the ceilings nor down when you’re on top of the buildings. The most annoying thing for me, though, was not finding a “next” button and having to go back to the map every time. That said, I still love that I could “see” this famous place for myself. So, it still makes the list of best virtual tours of historic sites!
15. Machu Picchu Historic Site Virtual Tour (Peru)
One of the top tourist destinations in the world, Machu Picchu is definitely on my bucket list. Yours, too? The Machu Picchu virtual tour will make you want to go now !
This Machu Picchu virtual tour is easy to navigate and the narration is short and pleasant. The disadvantage of this setup, though, is you can’t just go wherever you want (like you kinda can with Google Maps Street View). I really wanted to go inside the ruined buildings. And sit on the edge and run my fingers through that sand! This historic site virtual tour really only makes me want to go more .
INCREDIBLE. What a way to end this post of the best virtual tours of historic sites!
Want more of South America? Visit incredible waterfalls like Angel Falls and Iguazu Falls, national parks and the Galapagos wildlife !
Summary and Resources
Which of these virtual tours of historic sites make your best-of list? Which top tourist destination are you eager to travel to next?
Other posts you may be interested in:
- 25 virtual tours of beautiful NATIONAL PARKS around the world
- 15 virtual tours of WILDLIFE ENCOUNTERS
- 17 inspiring virtual tours of CITIES
If the famous place YOU were looking for isn’t among my best virtual tours of historic sites, here are two other fun websites to explore:
- AirPano has tons of virtual tours of historic sites and other amazing locations around the world, both by 360-degree photos and HD videos (built for VR headsets). Germany’s famous Neuschwanstein Castle. The Zhangjiajie Glass Bridge in China. Russia’s Saint Petersburg. AWESOME.
- Google Arts & Culture has a huge variety of virtual tours of historic sites and others for you to explore. More palaces, castles and museums. Aquariums. Melbourne Cricket Ground. Many historic sites can be toured with Google Maps Street View, but not all with audio or information icons.
Interested in getting a VR headset? If you’re into gaming or want a good one, reviewers praise the Oculus brand . Otherwise, you CAN get a cheap VR headset. Just check out Google Cardboard !
Know someone who’d enjoy this post? SHARE with a friend!
And now that you’re feeling the travel bug …
- Finally start your travel bucket list (FREE template!)
- Or, start planning your next trip!
Feature photo credit (Xian Warriors): Aaron Greenwood from Unsplash.
6 Responses
Enoued these very much. If anyone is interested, I have a website with over 50 tours. The photography and execution is certainly not as professional as thes 15, bit as a world history teacher I have added accurate historical audio tracks, offering a comprehensive tour of famed sights (as well as those off the beaten path) supplemented by photos I have taken as well as curated videos. The link is: https://tracyanddale.com/VirtualTraveler/index.html
Am I missing something (I’m visually impaired)? I can’t find links to the tours…
I had a virtual tour of the Holy Land. It led me to more than 36 sites with their own spiritual significance. Of course, the original site where a certain event took place are now protected and kept under the church buildings built around them.
Even though the original site was invisible, I could see so many well preserved churches and the people with deep thought on what God has done in those specific places.
The land was somewhat barren with much desert. But I believe it is still a land flowing with milk and honey as God said, over all. Seeing the site, churches and people led me to renew how great God is and how great salvation is through Jesus Christ, as a Christian myself.
Amen. There is something special about this area of the world, that is for sure.
Hi, great site with amazing links which I would love to use with my history student. Only think is that the Holy Land is in Palestine, not stotel territory of İsrael.
I’m so glad you’re enjoying the links! I agree … these virtual tours are pretty incredible.
Thank you for your comment. I’ve updated the post to reflect this.
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Tour a Historic Home, From the Comfort of Your Own
Bored with your surroundings? Walk the (virtual) halls of some storied grand houses.
By Alexis Soloski
Have you ever had the dream where you take a test that you haven’t studied for? Or the one where you’re caught in a public place in your underwear? Here’s another common one: You open a door in your home and discover a room you have never seen before. To make this one a reality, just charge your laptop.
Since the pandemic began, tours of historic American homes, once strictly in-person events, have proliferated online. There are houses with architectural significance, while others had famous former owners or are merely — and wildly — opulent. Encountering these domestic spaces through your screen means sacrificing vestibular sensation and any hope of surreptitiously stroking tablecloth or tapestry. But if you are looking for ways to increase your square footage — no contractor required — here are a handful of options.
Newport Mansions
The Gilded Age rarely gleamed as brightly as in late 19th-century Newport, R.I., which hosted summer cottages for the nation’s wealthy, assuming your definition of “cottages” extends to 70-room masterpieces of marble, alabaster and platinum leaf. With most homes currently closed, the Preservation Society of Newport County has made video and 3-D tours available of some of the more fabulous ones: The Elms, Marble House, Chateau-sur-Mer, Chepstow, Kingscote, Hunter House, and Isaac Bell House. Scroll and click through Italianate fantasia, Louis XIV pastiche, Gothic extravagance and high-end Victorian clutter. There’s also a tour of the Elms’s servants’ quarters , for a better understanding of the labor and austerity behind the scenes that kept all of that splendor. newportmansions.org
Winchester Mystery House
Purchased in 1886 by Sarah Winchester, who inherited a fortune from her gun magnate husband (the second president of Winchester Repeating Arms), this San Jose, Calif., mansion underwent almost constant expansion until her death in 1922. (Why? A popular if unsubstantiated rumor holds that the design was meant to confuse the spirits of those shot by Winchester rifles.) Live tours of its 160 rooms are currently suspended, but the corporation that owns the house has prepared a 41-minute video, available on Vimeo ($5.99 to rent, $13.99 to buy), with an interactive 3-D tour ($8.99) that includes areas not usually shown. Both allow access to the creepy stained glass, the numerology-influenced light fixtures, the stairways to nowhere and the insane number of doors (2,000!) that Winchester bankrolled. Paranormal enthusiasts might particularly enjoy the séance room, with its single entrance and three exits. Neither viewing includes glimpses of the ghosts visitors have reported seeing . winchestermysteryhouse.com
Mark Twain House
In 1874, Samuel Clemens (pen name Mark Twain) and his family moved into this Hartford, Conn., mansion designed by Edward Tuckerman Potter. The lavish interior, designed by Tiffany’s Associated Artists, came seven years later. Asked about the style of his house, Clemens said, “I guess we’ll call it ‘eclectic.’” Highlights of the free virtual tour include the library, the conservatory and the billiard room, which doubled as a writing room. It was a source of great sorrow to the writer when financial problems forced the family to abandon the house in 1891. “To us, our house was not unsentient matter,” Clemens wrote, “it had a heart, and a soul, and eyes to see us with .” To learn where and how other writers and artists lived, also consider a 3-D tour of Alice Austen’s house (aliceausten.org), a video tour of one of Georgia O’Keeffe’s homes (okeeffemuseum.org), a live feed from Winslow Homer’s studio (portlandmuseum.org/homer#) and a remote tour of Edgar Allan Poe’s Baltimore house (poeinbaltimore.org). marktwainhouse.org
The Frick Collection
Before it rebranded as a sumptuous museum , this Upper East Side mansion, designed by Thomas Hastings, housed the wealthy industrialist Henry Clay Frick. A new renovation will close the building for at least two years, with its art collection moving to the Frick Madison (the former home of the Whitney and the Met Breuer). In the meantime, a detailed 3-D guide with a helpful audio component moves viewers through the ground floor rooms of the Garden Court, the Fragonard Room (once a drawing room), the music room and the Boucher Room (once a boudoir), to name a few. The free tour includes close-ups of the art and baroque furnishings that surround it, as well as archival photographs. The second and third floors? Those remain largely out of sight, even online. frick.org
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10 Virtual Tours of Amazing Architecture Around the World
Visiting some of the world’s greatest architectural wonders—such as marvels of Frank Lloyd Wright and Zaha Hadid—has never been easier, thanks to virtual tours.
No need to strap on virtual-reality goggles—just click your way through these highly immersive, interactive visits for an architecture-themed trip from the comfort of your own home.
Courtesy of Taliesin Preservation
Once the personal residence of the godfather of prairie style, this 800-acre estate lies in the bucolic rolling hills of Spring Green, Wisconsin, just outside of Madison. It's currently home to the Taliesin School of Architecture and comes to life in this virtual tour of Taliesin , created by a fellow Wisconsinite. Paired with light classical music in the background, the narrator beings with the macro—why Frank Lloyd Wright’s elders settled in the Driftless Region—before diving into the micro, showcasing interior spaces (from the geometric-patterned area rug and barrel chairs in the Formal Living Room to the blue chaise cushions and Chinese art in the loggia , or second-floor patio) that Wright worked on between 1911 and his death in 1959. Bonus: visitors to Spring Green can never access the loggia.
Milwaukee Art Museum
In 2001, the Milwaukee Art Museum unveiled a Santiago Calatrava-designed addition that Time Magazine dubbed its “design of the year.” These soaring white wings are now forever linked to the city’s skyline. While normally the museum’s Haitian art and Outsider art collections are a draw, you can still experience a bird’s-eye view of Lake Michigan’s shoreline immediately upon entering, noting the way sunlight glints off Dale Chihuly’s blown-glass “Isola di San Giacomo in Palude Chandelier II.” Fortunately, Visit Milwaukee’s virtual tour of what locals call “The Calatrava” is the next best thing to actually visiting.
The Colour Palace
Courtesy of Dulwich Picture Gallery
Need a burst of serious color? The Colour Palace in London, designed by Pricegore and Yinka Ilori Studio , and unveiled last year as the contemporary sibling to Sir John Soane’s 1811 Dulwich Picture Gallery design, is your remedy. Step into this virtual tour , which is so vivid you might need to wear sunglasses. A marriage of West African (particularly Lagos’ fabric markets) and European influences, the result is a boxy rainbow of color that shifts with the sun, and your own orientation (thankfully, through both real-time and virtual visits). If you like crossing bridges and climbing jungle gyms, then the elevated walkways are kind of like that.
Versailles Palace
Flowers are poking out of the soil and trees are in bloom right now at Versailles Palace , France’s royal residence (from 1682 to 1789), 12 miles from Paris. Step into the splendor via this virtual tour, of the palace’s Hall of Mirrors , commissioned in 1678; with so much “eye candy” in the form of ornate gold trim, it’s no wonder this is the palace’s most famed room. To replace a large terrace, the hall was created in 1684 by French Baroque architect Louis Le Vau, who was commissioned to work on other areas of the palace, too.
Walt Disney Concert Hall
Architect Frank Gehry’s signature sheets of undulating metal soar above downtown L.A. even before you approach the Walt Disney Concert Hall , which just celebrated its 16th anniversary. Offering not just one, but many virtual tours , you can choose to explore the sunny lobby, backstage area, garden, or theater (with its Douglas fir-lined interior). Designed to offer supreme sound quality for performances, including those by Los Angeles Philharmonic, you’ll have to visit in person when the hall reopens to see (and hear) for yourself. But in the meantime, there’s this.
Farm Street Church
Courtesy of Farm Street Church
Seasoned travelers to Europe might quip that they’ve “seen it all” when it comes to churches, but in addition to the ones everybody knows (like Notre Dame in Paris), there are plenty of underrated sanctuaries. That includes Farm Street Church , a Jesuit Catholic parish in London’s Mayfair section and designed by Joseph John Scoles for its 1849 opening. Seeking a divine moment of inspiration? Make yourself a cup of tea and settle in for this virtual tour , which includes stained-glass windows, hand-carved wooden pews, and soaring ceilings.
Sacré-Coeur
Tucked into the Montmartre neighborhood of Paris—the basilica’s domed top is forever linked to the arrondissement and perched on Paris’ highest point— Sacré-Coeur stands as a symbol to France’s defeat in the Franco-Prussian War. Architect Paul Abadie designed the landmark, which opened in 1914, and it remains the second-most visited monument in Paris. To access the monument from your living room, visit the virtual tour here . There are two clickable maps, for the Domes and the Basilica, as well as sound options (because an organ or bells is what you might hear if you were actually there).
Sydney Opera House
Unveiled in 1973, this performing-arts venue hugging Sydney’s harbor was designed by Karl Langer, Peter Hall, and Jørn Utzon. As a consolation during this time of staying grounded, the opera house is releasing digital programming (dance performances, Sydney Symphony Orchestra concerts, interviews with notables, and more) on its website, to further enrich your virtual visit , which begins by entering it from outside, for the full experience. This year, the opera house celebrates 13 years since being named a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Dominion Office Building
Designed by Zaha Hadid, this Moscow office building spans nine stories along Sharikopodshipnikovskaya Street and was completed in 2015, designed to provide workspace to employees in the tech and creative sectors. Explore further with this virtual tour , showcasing how dramatic a palette of only black and white can be when it comes to such large-scale design.
Sistine Chapel
One of Italy’s most visited sites— the Vatican , which serves as the Pope’s personal residence—is also a must-see for art and architecture lovers. One reason is that the Sistine Chapel is here, including Michelangelo’s “The Last Judgment” fresco, found on the ceiling. A virtual tour allows you to zoom in on the frescos in a way you wouldn’t normally be able to on a visit. There’s also no limit to the number of times you can “visit.”
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Virtual Travel
A Smithsonian magazine special report
Travel | June 8, 2020
Take Virtual Tours of These Seven Historic Homes of American Artists
A new book looks at American art through the studios of the masters that made it
Jennifer Billock
Travel Correspondent
Throughout history, people have turned to art in times of strife. American landscape painter Winslow Homer's later work is perceived to be a reaction to what he witnessed during the Civil War. Photographer Alice Austen created a whole series on immigrants coming into New York in the 1890s and being quarantined before they could enter Ellis Island. And, of course, this is evident in the present time, with coronavirus street art and murals memorializing George Floyd springing up around the world.
“In times like this, people do turn to these communal expressions of being human,” says Valerie Balint, author of Guide to Historic Artists' Homes & Studios , the new guidebook for the 44 site museums in the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s Historic Artists’ Home and Studios program. “People look to the specific creative voice of humanity at times when other aspects of humanity are being challenged, and certainly artists who are producing in any one of those moments can't help but be impacted by that.”
Balint’s book offers an inside view of the homes and studios of American artists throughout history. Readers can imagine themselves walking through the living room of Weir Farm, the Connecticut home of the grand patriarch of American impressionism, Julian Alden Weir. They can explore the chaotic studio floor at the East Hampton, New York house where Jackson Pollock and his wife, Lee Krasner, lived from 1945 until their deaths in 1956 and 1984, respectively. Readers can inspect the thousands of tiles lining the walls at Henry Chapman Mercer’s Fonthill Castle in Doylestown, Pennsylvania, or take in the statuary of Elisabet Ney’s self-designed sculpture studio in Austin, Texas.
Historic Artists' Homes and Studios: A Guide
From the desert vistas of Georgia O'Keeffe's New Mexico ranch to Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner's Hamptons cottage, step into the homes and studios of illustrious American artists and witness creativity in the making.
Through the book, it becomes apparent how the personal spaces of these artists impacted their work, potentially giving an idea of how we can embrace our own spaces as we stay home more often than not.
“While we're at home, we are communing with our personal spaces on an extended basis in ways many of us have not done for years,” Balint says. “It's really interesting to examine, at this moment, the incredibly personal spaces where some of the most important visual minds and creatives of American culture did their work. [It’s interesting to examine] the choices they made in terms of location, type of house they wanted to be in, the type of space, and what they surrounded themselves with, and how that fostered these great pieces of art and artistic movements that we still feel connected to today. Seeing how the landscapes informed works of art or how the artists themselves stretched into architectural and landscape practice beyond the confines of the picture frame really makes us remember that creative spirit is limitless. It humanizes these great geniuses of art, and reminds us that creativity resides in all of us.”
Armchair travel to the following American artists’ homes and studios through Balint's book, and then check out the virtual tours available for each site.
Thomas Hart Benton State Historic Site; Kansas City, Missouri
Large-scale muralist and painter Thomas Hart Benton lived in this limestone home , built in 1903 by architect George Mathews, with his family until his death in 1975. Benton worked in the carriage barn behind the house, where he spent the majority of his days painting. It was here he created one of his most famous works, A Social History of the State of Missouri , which is on display in Missouri's state capitol building. Benton died in his studio; he always returned to the house for dinner with his family, and one night, he returned to the studio to sign his latest (and last) piece, but collapsed and died before he could. Rita Benton, his wife, died only 11 weeks later, and the house and studio have remained the same ever since, per her wishes.
“We could see ourselves tinkling on the piano and grabbing a drink off of the bar cart in the dining room,” Balint says. “But when you're in the studio, you see all the different parts of process that need to go into making a really large-scale mural. Because of all the detritus that's there, you can actually see this is a very complex process.”
C-SPAN offers a video tour of Benton's home and studio, led by site administrator Steve Sitton. You'll also discover a bit about Benton's personal life.
Mercer Museum and Fonthill Castle; Doylestown, Pennsylvania
Henry Chapman Mercer’s concrete home and studio , constructed between 1908 and 1912, was of the tilemaker and archaeologist’s own design. Though inspired by European buildings the artist discovered during travels while he was younger, the building completely flouts standard construction methods of the time it was built.
“He just decided he was going to create a concrete castle in the image that he wanted to do it, which meant that he created a new way to use this material,” Balint says. “He completely abandoned any typical ways of planning for an architectural space. He actually just made little models of rooms and then stuck them together. That’s why the outside looks really weird and irregular. So often in architecture, you consider the exterior of the building. But Mercer really cared about how his rooms were going to be in relationship to each other, and how that would all fit together externally was just not as important to him.”
Inside, the home reflects the chaotic nature of its design through the thousands of tiles he used to adorn the walls, ceiling and floors. Mercer created tiles for specific themed rooms, like pink and blue tiles in the Columbus Room designed to reflect Columbus’ voyages and the native people of the places he landed. The 44-room castle is also lined with Mercer’s massive library and ceramics collection.
This three-minute video tour walks you through Fonthill Castle, sharing information about Mercer and the art decorating the walls inside.
Alice Austen House; Staten Island, New York
Photographer Alice Austen lived a privileged life, but also one that didn’t conform to modern times. Photography wasn’t considered a suitable profession for a woman; however, her family was wealthy enough that she didn’t need to live off just her earnings. She often shocked society when she donned her corset and bicycled into New York City to capture images of life there, from shoeshine boys to quarantined immigrants. She lived with her partner, Gertrude Tate, in the family home (where she had a small darkroom in an upstairs closet and had to wash her prints in the well outside), even though both their families disapproved of the relationship.
“The Alice Austen House is a nationally-designated LGBTQ site, and I think it offers members of that community a touchstone to go to, to understand the creative practice of a person who was trying to forge her own way within the social conventions and artistic conventions of her time,” Balint says. “She managed to live a life on her terms and created work that was interesting and unique.”
That being said, Austen’s house was typical for the time period, a 1700s Dutch cottage with Victorian and Gothic Revival elements added by her grandfather in 1844. Austen lost everything she owned, including the house, in the 1929 stock market crash. Her family wouldn’t allow her to legally live with Tate afterwards, so she intentionally stayed impoverished and moved into a local poor house where Tate often visited her. Austen died in 1952, and was again denied her wishes to be with Tate—she was buried in the family plot instead of together with her partner.
The Alice Austen House created this virtual tour on Google Expeditions, allowing viewers to walk through the home and overlay historical images onto the modern setting.
Elizabet Ney Museum; Austin, Texas
When sculptor Elisabet Ney built her limestone castle home and studio —at once Texas’ first artist studio and first art museum—in 1892, she was in her 50s and had already reinvented her life several times. She began her career among the German elite, friend to royals and war heroes and working out of a studio in the German royal court. She and her husband, Edmund Montgomery, came to the U.S. in 1871 to escape political turmoil and get medical care for Montgomery. They first lived on a cotton plantation in Texas, where Ney quit sculpting to run the plantation, raise her two children and be a leader in the Texas women’s rights movement.
When her surviving child was grown and out of the house, she built her studio and reclaimed a career as a sculptor. Some of her first commissions were sculptures for the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago, and her masterpiece— Lady Macbeth —is on display at Smithsonian American Art Museum.
“This is a woman who lived nine lives,” Balint says. “She's an incredibly complex person. She basically built her studio to create an artistic enclave. She would hold studio salons right out by the lake. Austin is really known for being an artistic community, and she is the embodiment of what Austin represents. She helped forge it.”
Take a video tour of Elisabet Ney's studio and explore her sculptures on YouTube, led by the museum's curator Oliver Franklin.
Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center; East Hampton, New York
About a week and a half after getting married in 1945, abstract expressionists Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner moved into a secluded cedar-shingle home built in 1879. Initially, Pollock painted in an upstairs bedroom while Krasner worked in the back parlor. But Pollock eventually moved his studio out to the barn, where the chaotic marks of his work remain splashed on the floor today. After Pollock’s death in 1956, Krasner moved into the barn studio, and today the walls still echo with the huge arching movements of her painting. The detritus of their work in the barn makes the building itself almost like stepping into a joint Pollock and Krasner painting.
“There are very few places you can go where you can understand process,” Balint says. “The house is so modest, and the studio is so modest, and there's this beautiful bucolic view out to the marshland and the creek. Pollock and Krasner both said they were inspired by this environment. And then you go into the studio, and you look down at the floor, and you look up at the walls, and you just understand being in the process. When you go to the studio, your understanding of the physicality of the process is changed through that experience.”
This YouTube virtual tour of Pollock and Krasner's home and studio, led by site director Helen A. Harrison, describes the history of the site, the artists' styles, and how the residence changed when it became a museum.
Winslow Homer House; Scarborough, Maine
In 1883, after gaining fame with oil paintings, watercolors and Civil War illustrations in Harper’s Weekly , painter Winslow Homer gave up urban life in New York City and moved to a coastal retreat in Maine, where he established his home and studio in a two-story Shingle Style carriage barn . Here, Homer dramatically shifted his work as well, from detailed illustrations to pieces reflecting the environment where he lived and worked.
“Works by Homer evoke such emotion for people,” Balint says. “And when you stand in the home, your sense of why you feel what you feel when you look at one of those paintings becomes even more imprinted upon you. You understand suddenly why that type of painting causes a reaction. You can see how a particular view and a particular environment can pull upon an individual soul and their desire to then somehow capture that for others.”
Homer lived a simple life in Maine, though taking time to travel regularly. He didn’t have running water or electricity, and relied on a fireplace for heat. His main goal was to focus on his work and the surrounding environs, leading him to create masterpieces like Weatherbeaten , an 1894 painting of a crashing ocean scene that’s now on display in the Portland Museum of Art.
This YouTube tour through Winslow Homer's studio speaks to artifacts, his career in New York before arriving in Maine, and his personal life.
Weir Farm; Wilton, Connecticut
American impressionism takes hold at Weir Farm , a home and studio enclave purchased in 1882 by Julian Alden Weir, a pioneer in the style. The 153-acre farm saw three generations of Impressionist work conducted on the premises, not just by Weir but also by his daughter, Dorothy Weir Young, and her husband, sculptor Mahonri Mackintosh Young, and artists Doris and Sperry Andrews, who bought part of the property after befriending the Youngs. Today, the farm and its picturesque red buildings are one of three major sites devoted to American Impressionism throughout history.
“Because it's multi-generational, you see the kind of studio a painter needs and wants, and then a hop, skip and a jump away is the type of very large studio that a sculptor needs,” Balint says. “You get to understand what the needs are of the different types of art practice in a really great way. Weir Farm is such a representation of what we, as Americans, think of when we think of our tie to the land—something that starts as a family farm and this beautiful pastoralness, and then all these interesting things come together about how we look at land in our culture.”
Follow along with this YouTube video tour to learn more about Weir Farm, its past residents, and the life and history of J. Alden Weir.
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Jennifer Billock | | READ MORE
Jennifer Billock is an award-winning writer, bestselling author, and editor. She is currently dreaming of an around-the-world trip with her Boston terrier. Check out her website at jenniferbillock.com .
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33 Historic Tours You Can Take Virtually From The Comfort Of Your Home
Y’all. We are all stuck at home, and it’s so hard to figure out how to keep the kids entertained.
Well, say no more. We got ya!
We’ve gathered 33 Historic Tours You Can Take Virtually . Yes, that means you can explore all these cool historic sites from the comfort of your home and in your pj’s!
This is all made possible by the National Trust for Historic Preservation.
Here’s 33 Historic Tours You Can Take Virtually From The Comfort Of Your Home
Alice Austen House — Staten Island, NY
B&O Railroad Museum — Baltimore, MD
Charles Allis Art Museum — Milwaukee, WI
Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center — East Hampton, NY
Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site — Buffalo, NY
George Eastman Museum — Rochester, NY
Vizcaya Museum And Gardens — Miami, FL
Silver City Museum — Silver City, NM
Hagley Museum and Library — Wilmington, DE
Strawbery Banke Museum — Portsmouth, NH
Thomasville History Center — Thomasville, GA
American Independence Museum — Exeter, NH
Fairfield Museum and History Center — Fairfield, CT
Greenwich Historical Society — Cos Cob, CT
Henry B. Plant Museum — Tampa, FL
Rough Point — Newport, RI
The James Monroe Museum — Fredericksburg, VA
Marble House , Newport, RI
Meadowcroft Rockshelter and Historic Village — Avella, PA
Pension Building, National Building Museum — Washington, DC
The Breakers — Newport, RI
Historic Huguenot Street – New Paltz, NY
Mary Todd Lincoln House — Lexington, KY
Buffalo Trace Distillery — Frankfort, KY
Historic L. B. Brown House Museum — Bartow, FL
Liberty Hall Historic Site — Frankfort, KY
Ships of the Sea Maritime Museum / William Scarbrough House and Gardens — Savannah, GA
Decatur House — Washington, DC
Lyndhurst — Tarrytown, NY
President Lincoln’s Cottage — Washington, DC
The Glass House — New Canaan, CT
Tread of Pioneers Museum — Steamboat Springs, CO
Gilgal Sculpture Garden — Salt Lake City, UT
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MONTECRISTO
Take a tour through this West Hollywood mansion that once belonged to Prince. Image courtesy of TopTenRealEstateDeals.com.
Tired of Your House? Take a Virtual Tour Into the Homes of the Stars
- Story: Felicity Stone
Social distancing is a two-way—or no-way—street. Not only can we not leave our homes except for the most basic shopping, but the closest anyone gets to visiting is dropping off a purchase. On the upside, technology gives us the means for a little escape. And what better time to virtually tour celebrity homes—both to seek inspiration and satisfy our own curiosity—than when we’re stuck inside?
Enter Architectural Digest ‘s “Open Door” series, which features video tours of celebrities’ houses conducted by the owners themselves.
You can visit Lenny Kravitz in Brazil , where he’ll take you around his working farm on an 18th-century coffee plantation, then through his Portuguese-style house with vintage pieces such as a piano that belonged to Ingrid Bergman and a chair that was Andy Warhol’s. Then it’s over to the guest house, where his band stays during recording sessions.
Lenny Kravitz takes you on a tour on horseback through his Brazilian farm. Screenshot from Open Door/Architectural Digest.
Or drop by Sheryl Crow’s Nashville property , with a country-style house, horse stable, and saloon with Guinness on tap. Above the stable is the recording studio, with guitars lining the wall, a piano, vintage drums, and mixing boards. Crow also has a chapel filled with religious artifacts that inspire her.
Prefer something more urban? Check out Michael Kors’ Greenwich Village penthouse or Kerry Washington’s New York pad overlooking the Hudson River.
How about someone from B.C.? Shay Mitchell, who grew up in West Vancouver and starred in Degrassi: The Next Generation and Pretty Little Liars , takes us through her 1920s Spanish/Mediterranean house with Moroccan accents on LA’s West Side.
British Columbia’s own Shay Mitchell welcomes you into her L.A. home. Screenshot from Open Door/Architectural Digest.
The tours are addictive, and there are lots of them: Jessica Alba’s traditional LA home , Liv Tyler’s New York brownstone , Cara and Poppy Delevingne’s jungle-themed place , Maria Sharapova’s house with basement bowling alley , Chelsea Handler’s indoor-outdoor residence , and more.
And if before-and-after decor intrigues you, let Kris Jenner show you her Hidden Hills home in the AD “Open House” video — then explore it in 3D to see what it looked like when she bought it. California’s REH Real Estate posts 3D tours of houses belonging to stars such as Jenner, as well as Rihanna , which are fun to navigate.
You can zoom in and out, turn around, move from room to room, and go up and down stairs. Just bear in mind that they were photographed when the house was for sale so the decor reflects the seller, who may not be the celebrity in question—like the West Hollywood residence Kendall Jenner bought from John Krasinski and Emily Blunt in 2016 and then sold a year later.
If you’re interested in historic homes, House Beautiful has rounded up 10 virtual tours . The degree of interactivity varies, depending on the venue. The Mark Twain House & Museum has three options: 3D, virtual reality, and video.
Click on objects to learn more about the history of Buckingham Palace. Screenshot from the Royal.uk virtual tour.
Others, like Buckingham Palace and the Frida Kahlo Museum, allow you to rotate the view and click on details for explanatory captions. Some require Adobe Flash, and Monticello makes you purchase a ticket for a video tour. Miami’s Vizcaya Museum and Gardens provides a slideshow with captions and background sounds of water or birds.
TopTenRealEstateDeals.com also publishes slideshows, featuring straightforward shots of celebrity homes currently on the market. The residences include the LA mansion Prince painted purple, and Lee Iococca’s Tuscan-style Bel Air estate, each listed for just under $30 million.
Check out the pool at Prince’s old West Hollywood mansion. Image courtesy of TopTenRealEstateDeals.com.
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Boris Pasternak's museum house
Pasternak’s “important achievement both in contemporary lyrical poetry and in the field of the great Russian epic tradition" was honored with a Nobel Prize for Literature in 1958. For many readers outside Russia, Pasternak is known mainly as the author of the touching historical novel Doctor Zhivago written in 1957. The novel as a whole communicates the haphazard, uncertain and chaotic quality of life caused by the Russian Revolution and the heroic case of quiet humanism demonstrated by a single person.
Pasternak’s translations of Georgian poets favored by Joseph Stalin probably saved his life during the purges of the 1930’s. However, the individualistic Pasternak was not suited to the Soviet artistic climate when art was required to have a clear socialism-inspired agenda and so Russian publishers were unwilling to print Pasternak’s novel. In fact, Doctor Zhivago first appeared in Italy in 1957.
Pasternak won his Nobel Prize the following year. Despite Pasternak politely declining his Nobel Prize quoting: “because of the significance given to this award in the society to which I belong”, the award nevertheless spread his fame well beyond Russia. He ended his life in virtual exile in an artist's community in Peredelkino village. His last poems are devoted to love, to freedom and to reconciliation with God.
Pasternak was rehabilitated posthumously in 1987. In 1988, after being banned for three decades, "Doctor Zhivago" was published in the USSR. In 1989 Pasternak's son accepted his father's Nobel medal in Stockholm.
Pastenak loved his house in Peredelkino, the house and surrounding nature featuring in his poetry. The poet considered the cycle of poems "Peredelkino", which he completed in the spring of 1941, to be his best work. The poet spent the first difficult months of the war in Peredelkino; he completed the novel "Doctor Zhivago" here, wrote the Lara poems and translated Shakespeare and Goethe. It was in this house that he learned he was to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature on October 23rd 1958. He died here on May 30 1960.
The house in Peredelkino only acquired the status of a museum in 1990, thirty years after the poet's death and a century after his birth. The museum has fully preserved the environment and atmosphere of the house where Boris Pasternak lived and worked. The director of the museum is Elena Pasternak, grandaughter of Boris Pasternak.
Pasternak’s grave can be found in Peredelkino cemetery which is situated 20 minutes walk from the poet’s house.
Tour duration: 6-7 hours
Tour cost: English - 150 USD, Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese - 180 USD
Additional expenses: car - 150 USD, or train - 10 USD
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Red Square & Moscow City Tour
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Description
Highlights:.
- Experience medieval Kitay Gorod (China town).
- Wander picturesque Red Square and Alexander Garden.
- Explore grand Christ the Savior Cathedral on our Red Square tour.
- Breathtaking panoramic views from Patriarch bridge.
- Enjoy a hearty lunch on the large open verandah and marvel at the stunning views of the Kremlin.
- Learn about Russian culture from the local through relaxed cultural discussions.
Tour Itinerary:
Red square:.
Russia and Moscow are synonymous with Red Square and the Kremlin and that's hardly surprising as you'll find these places absolutely stunning!
- - Walk-through the Resurrection Gate and don’t forget to flip a coin so you’ll be sure to come back one day!
- - Visit the world's famous Kazan Cathedral .
- - See the State Department Store (GUM), once the Upper Trading Stalls, which were built over a century ago and still operating!
- - Admire the lovely St. Basil's Cathedral! The French diplomat Marquis de Custine commented that it combined "the scales of a golden fish, the enamelled skin of a serpent, the changeful hues of the lizard, the glossy rose and azure of the pigeon's neck" and wondered at "the men who go to worship God in this box of confectionery work".
- - Walk by Lobnoye Mesto (literally meaning "Execution Place", or "Place of Skulls"), once Ivan the Terrible's stage for religious ceremonies, speeches, and important events.
- - Entering the Alexander Garden , you’ll take in spectacular views of Russian architecture from ancient to Soviet times, as well as the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier with an eternal flame. Watch Changing of the Guard Ceremony every hour in summer and every half an hour in winter.
Kitai-gorod:
Stroll along medieval Kitai-gorod with its strong ancient Russia feel, known for its bohemian lifestyle, markets and arts.
- - Nikolskaya Street. Here you will find the Russia's first publishing house, the second oldest monastery, and Ferryn Pharmacy, known as the number one pharmacy back in Soviet times and famous for its Empire-style architecture.
- - Ilinka Street. The financial street of the Kitaigorod (China Town) district, where you’ll find the Gostiny Dvor (Merchant’s Yard), which is now a showroom for Ferraris and Maseratis. The street was designed in the 1790s by Catherine the Great.
- - Varvarka street. The oldest street in Moscow, which dates back to the 14th century, and still has remnants of early Muscovite architecture, such as the Old English Court and the Palace of the Romanov’s.
- - Kamergersky Lane. Only a small road of about 250 meters, it is home to some of the oldest artifacts of the city, as each building holds a fascinating story. Some of Russia's most famous writers, poets, and composers from as far back as the Golden Age of Russian culture, have lived or worked on this lane.
Historic City Center
Walk the historical old center of Moscow with its cool local vibe, including the main Tverskaya street , and indulge in desserts in the first grocery “Eliseev's store” , housed in an 18th century neoclassical building, famous for its baroque interior and decoration.
From our tour. Impressions of our American tourist:
At 3:30, as energy flagged, lunch was on the agenda at a Ukrainian restaurant. Just in time! We asked our guide to order for us. We all had the same thing....borscht (the Ukrainian version has beans and more tomatoes than the Russian version, which has more beets and includes beef).
The special high bread served is called galushki. Our main course was golubtsy...a dish of minced meat rolled in braised cabbage leaves. Both dishes called for optional sour cream as a topping....of course, yes, please....I recommend it.
Full, satisfied, and completely refreshed, it was off to Red Square and St. Basil's and GUM department store. Red Square is not so named because of the color of the brick walls of the Kremlin. Rather the word for 'red' and the word for 'beautiful' are similar in pronunciation....and, there you have it.
As we made the turn by the National Museum in front of which is the mounted sculpture of the "Marshall of Victory," Giorgy Zhukov from WWII and caught our first view of St. Basil's, my friend and I simultaneously emitted "Oooohhhhh!" There it was....the iconic onion domes of St. Basil's! Hooray....it was open until 7....we had about 30 minutes and were allowed in, AND we could take photos with no flash.
Now, I can give you a taste of what we saw in the other cathedrals in Cathedral Square. What we learned is that St. Vasily and St. Basil are one in the same....Russian/English. He was a common man who wandered Moscow unclothed and barefoot. But, all, even Ivan the Terrible, heeded his opinions derived from his visions. Ivan had this cathedral built over his tomb.
As we exited and took photos up close of the onion domes, Inna presented us with chocolate (how did she know we were ready for another energy boost, and we each got a big piece of chocolate. The baby's name pictured on the wrapper of this famous Russian chocolate is Alyonka....the Russian Gerber baby, don't you think?
One could wear out the credit card in GUM's (capitalized because it is actually a government abbreviation), but the 'kitty' and my credit card stayed in my pocket as we strolled through the glass-topped arcade.
We then strolled through some of Moscow's lovely pedestrian streets; paused to listen as a wonderful quartet performed Vivaldi's "Four Seasons" in an underground passage to cross the busy street (hooray!....we DID have our 'classical concert' experience after all; a request Alina tried in vain to fill because none was scheduled those days), saw the Bolshoi, which means 'big' (my friend has yet to recover that their performance schedule did not coincide with our cruise), saw the Central Telegraph Building, dating from the 1930's, and made our way to the Ritz-Carlton to see the night view of Moscow from the rooftop bar, called O2.
There were fleece blankets to wrap yourself in....yes, it got that cold when the sun set. We each ordered something hot to drink...the ginger, mint, lemon tea served to me in a parfait glass (for 600 rubles...about $9....you pay for the view here!) was delightful and hit the spot perfectly. It was time to call it a night....
What you get:
- + A friend in Moscow.
- + Private & customized Moscow tour.
- + An exciting city tour, not just boring history lessons.
- + An authentic experience of local life.
- + Flexibility during the tour: changes can be made at any time to suit individual preferences.
- + Amazing deals for breakfast, lunch, and dinner in the very best cafes & restaurants. Discounts on weekdays (Mon-Fri).
- + A photo session amongst spectacular Moscow scenery that can be treasured for a lifetime.
- + Good value for souvenirs, taxis, and hotels.
- + Expert advice on what to do, where to go, and how to make the most of your time.
*This Moscow city tour can be modified to meet your requirements.
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Gogol`s house in Nikitsky Boulevard is the only place in Moscow that keeps memory of the last years of Nikolai Gogol. The Gogol Museum underwent renovation in 2009 and now visitors can see the fireplace where Gogol burnt one of his famous manuscripts of Dead Souls and see the rooms where he passed his final hours.
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