Sentences with phrase «alleyways which»

Perhaps visit the famous Vishwanath Temple, dedicated to the Hindu deity of Shiva, or maybe take a walk through the galis, the city's winding alleyways which lead to traditional market stalls.
Stroll past award - winning modern architecture and majestic old buildings, built in the area's typical grey stone, or amble down the winding alleyways which fan out from the beautiful Royal Mile, named because it runs between Edinburgh Castle and Holyrood Palace.

Not exact matches

As my Beau and I strolled through the narrow alleyways of the Old Town in Split, we were struck by the intense heat of the Old Town, which entraps the hot air within its high brick walls.
The crumbling streets of Belfast were a maze of terraced houses and narrow alleyways in which stolen guns were passed and the next generation was raised to hate the British soldiers who patrolled their streets.
Although, plenty of what the viewer sees feels familiar to Harry Potter fans — photos in newspapers which are constantly moving — the New York period setting, filled with dingy alleyways and glamorous Jazz Age speakeasys, is consistently exciting to explore.
Entangled in a high - stakes game of duplicity and betrayal which threatens not only his career and potential fortune, but also the lives of his fellow players, Richard has to call on all he has now learned from the brightest stages and the darkest alleyways of the city.
The most common reason to buy an outdoor gate is to stop your pet escaping up an alleyway or onto patios, which is essential for his safety.
When I did have a chance to play, much of my time was spent walking the city, which is for the most part very safe and has loads of great alleyways and side streets to discover.
The town is marked by narrow roads and winding alleyways, especially fun to navigate when storms roll in and the electricity goes out, which is a frequent experience.
However, if you explore further into Barcelona's neighbourhoods through the narrow alleyways and labyrinth of streets, we guarantee that you will discover some quieter, smaller squares — all of which have their own unique personality.
The mix of influences led to the development of unique local culture, music, art, cuisine, and architecture, which is most visible in the Old Town of Corfu, with its Italianate buildings, smattering of palaces, narrow alleyways hung with laundry, and grand squares built around imposing Orthodox and Catholic churches.
The town is reputed to house the oldest Inn in England, which can trace its legacy back to 947AD, and is dotted with narrow cobbled alleyways and streets, centred around the charming village green complete with 19th century stocks.
But, to experience Genoa at its most enchanting, wander around the tangle of narrow alleyways named «Carruggi» which unfurl behind the port and lead to impressive palaces like the Palazzo di San Giorgo, formerly one of Europe's first banks and before that a prison for Venetian captives such as Marco Polo.
What's more, there are literally hundreds of tranquil little alleyways and narrow cobbled streets to wander down, which in my opinion is the best way to spend your time in the imperial city.
Reached within 30 minutes by road, Phuket Town appeals to holidaymakers with its host of colourful shophouses designed in Sino - Portuguese style and which nowadays house arty coffee shops and restaurants, narrow alleyways with Chinese Taoist shrines, and shopping opportunities for artworks and curios along with clothing and accessories.
Call it what you will: Breakout, Arkanoid, Brick Breaker, Alleyway... no matter the name, video games in which players use a paddle to deflect a ball at destructible blocks / bricks have been with us for decades, but the brick breaking genre continues to evolve alongside more detailed genres such as platforming and fighting.
For food, there was yakitori in the ever - wonderful Torigin in Ginza as well as on Omoide Yokocho, also known as Piss Alley, which featured loads of quaint little bars and grills on a narrow alleyway.
An article on Sept. 25 about the Impasse Ronsin, an alleyway in Paris in which a number of famed artists of postwar France lived and worked in the 1950s and 1960s, described incorrectly the career of the artist Niki de Saint Phalle and the artwork she is shown creating by shooting at it with a.22 rifle.
His famous 45 - minute zoom, «Wavelength,» likewise bubbles up when watching Laida Lertxundi's mind - bending film, in which a stabilized camera moves seamlessly backward through L.A. alleyways.
The works on display in this exhibition each display a remarkable sense of formal symmetry, this is perhaps most noticeable in the recurring scenes of vacant alleyways, in which Riddy has exploited the constructed environment surrounding the uninhabited laneways to serve as a compositional frame.
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