Strange Places


Strange Place

Manmade Beach in Japan — Ocean Dome

If you can’t find a nearby crowded beach, make one! Only in Japan…

Ocean Dome is known as the world’s largest indoor water park
with a retractable roof. The air temperature is always kept around 30º C and the water temperature is kept at around 28º C.

The name Seagaia is a combination of the words “sea” and “gaia”, which is Greek for earth. It’s located near the Pacific Ocean on Kyushu Island.

Weird place

Impact Lab’s photos of Ocean Dome

More photos of Seagaia

More photos here of Ocean Dome

Unbelievable photo set from Boston.com

It is Carnival Season in many countries around the world with a Roman Catholic heritage. Celebrations and parades put on just prior to the observance of Lent. Tomorrow will be the Mardi Gras in New Orleans, but the past couple of weeks have seen parades and celebrations throughout Europe, the Caribbean and South America – notably Venice, Italy and Brazil. Collected here are just a glimpse of some of the elaborate celebrations of this Carnival season.

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More fabulous photos about the Carnival on Boston.com

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To celebrate Lincoln’s birthday and President’s Day, the editors at RoadsideAmerica.com have selected their favorite Lincoln tourist attractions and exhibits. From a much longer list, these 12 leapt onto the stage of infamy — from the Lincoln Watermelon Monument to the bronzed foundation of Lincoln’s Boyhood Home. There’s even one unmentionable exhibit (which they’ve chosen to mention, of course).

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Buy Abraham Lincoln candy

Unusual Lincoln objects at Brown University

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Abe Lincoln and Jesus Shrine

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Lincoln Watermelon Monument


HAPPY VALENTINES DAY!

valentine-red-room.jpg Here’s a very red room we stayed in last August at The Madonna Inn in San Luis Obispo, California. They named it the Tack Room. I had red leather wall covering, red leather bedspreads, red stained wood walls, pink marble pedestal sinks, and lots more red stuff.
I wonder who’s staying there this Valentines Day?

See our full set of photos from the extraordinary Madonna Inn

The Madonna Inn has 109 unique theme rooms where you can stay, as well as multiple odd over-the-top dining environments. You can/should see photos of all 109 rooms here.

Click "Tour Our Rooms Online" at the top right, and then the "Next " button under the photos to tour through each room.

Grotto of the Redemption

Grotto of the Redemption was the second folk-art installation I remember visiting as a child. It was a fascinating place, made completely out of rocks and gemstones by Father Paul Matthias Dobberstein.

It’s said that Father Dobberstein became critically ill with pneumonia. As he fought for his life he prayed to the Blessed Virgin Mary to intercede for him for the grace of health. He promised to build a shrine in her honor of he lived.

And he did.

Official Grotto of the Redemption website

If you missed the opening, don’t worry, you can drop by anytime to the Official Bad Art Museum of Art at Cafe Racer because it’s now open from 7am until 2am, 7 days a week. Stop by for lunch or dinner or a cold one after work and view the stupendous art.
• Video by Marlow •

Subterranea Britannica is an organization with a website that features all sorts of underground man-made structures and places. There is information about 100′s of underground railways, postoffices, caves, bunkers, stations, tunnels. It has an especially interesting photo tour of Chernobyl, but this one is real (remember Chernobyl motorcycle girl? Not a hoax exactly, but a sort of fanciful photo tour.)

Official tours are available of the area, and these tours are in closed cars with a geiger counter, to make sure visitors aren’t exposed to dangerous levels of radioactivity. The site has an incredible photo tour, including photos of the town before the accident.

Via Boing Boing

This floating swimming pool in the river is called the Badeschiff (that’s German for “bathing ship”) this floating swimming pool is really just an old barge transformed into a public pool last year in Berlin, on the Spree river. Unfortunately, the river itself is much too polluted for people to swim in, so this idea, as crazy as it looks, makes some sense.

It was first spotted in 2007, during a very hot Summer and during the off-season it’s covered and closed to the public. But the hot Summer is here again and the Germans in Berlin will once again be able to enjoy a swim in the cool water of the Badeschiff. Would’ve been cool if it had a glass bottom though, so you could see the river.

The Floating Swimming Pool – Oddity Central

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McDonald’s #1 Store Museum in Des Plaines, Ill.

Get a real taste for nostalgia at the McDonald’s #1 Store museum. The red-and-white-tiled museum in suburban Chicago recreates the first McDonald’s restaurant, opened by Ray Kroc on April 15, 1955. The entrance sign is original, as is much of the kitchen equipment once used for making burgers, fries and milkshakes. Plus, an all-male crew of mannequins dressed in vintage uniforms stands ready to take your order.

Top 10 Food Museums

Clingstone

Clingstone, an unusual, 103-year-old mansion in Rhode Island’s Narragansett Bay, survives through the love and hard work of family and friends. Via Grow-a-Brain

Elvis House

What better way to celebrate the closing of Weep Week in Memphis than to look at some Elvis real estate for sale.

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Scary Elvis’ Graceland replica for sale in L.A. for only $999,000.

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It’s located at 17912 Parthenia St, Los Angeles, CA 91325, and has 3 bedrooms and 3 baths.

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I wonder if it comes furnished?

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And a REAL Elvis house for sale in Palm Springs.

Elvis house in Palm Springs

The 5,000-square-foot estate at 845 W. Chino Canyon Road was bought by beloved music legend Elvis Presley in April 1970. He paid $85,000 for it, according to previous Desert Sun reports. According to the Wall Street Journal, it’s now on the market again for $17M. Right.

Elvis Honeymoon House photo tour

Blanket covered gas station

Artist Jennifer Marsh covered this 50-year-old former Citgo station with a giant blanket. Jennifer was sick of paying high gas prices and bothered by the abandoned gas station that was an eyesore on the drive to her studio each day, so she decided to do something about it. With the help of professional and amateur artists from 15 countries and more than 2,500 grade-school students in 29 states, Marsh covered the 50-year-old former Citgo station — pumps, light stands, signs and all — with more than 3,000 fiber panels that are crocheted, knitted, quilted or stitched together.

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The panels cover 5,000 square feet and come in every color, hue and texture. There are panels in burlap, leather, even silk. There are panels of solid color and others with patterns, prints or scenes.

The project cost about $29,000, much of it her own money. There were also grants and contributions from individuals and businesses.

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Want to cover your own gas station? Jennifer offers helpful hints and ideas to create your own jumbo art work.

Goats on the Roof

Goats on the Roof and Tiger Mountain Market is just south of Clayton, GA, in Rabun County Georgia, via Neatorama.

Pool Party

The hottest parties in Vegas aren’t at the clubs. They’re by the pools.

Nestled in a corner past the Mirage’s general pool area, beyond the Secret Garden and Dolphin Habitat and down a winding concrete path, is Bare, the hotel’s exclusive, adults-only pool. Shrouded in greenery and teak paneling, the velvet-roped entrance is guarded by an employee who checks IDs.

Pools Gone Wild

Frederic Chaubin

Frederic Chaubin is chief editor of the French magazine Citizen K, and also a photographer who has been attracted by strange architecture in the former Soviet Union. The photos he takes in countries like Lithuania, Ukraine, Russia, Belarus and Georgia, reveal an extraordinary, almost sci-fi world. PingMag takes you to the world of Soviet style architecture with Frederic Chaubin in this incredible series of photos.

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