First of all because it's simply beautiful,
colorful houses along the river, flowers everywhere, bright rickshaws, colonial architecture all these and more make Melaka a perfect weekend destination for KL citizens.
Between
the colorful houses along the canals to the narrow winding city roads and Jewish Quarters, this city is a fantastic place to visit while in Spain.
Not exact matches
I loved strolling through the beautiful streets lined with
colorful houses with painted doors (see more in these posts: here & here) and surrounded by cacti (see more: here), driving
along streets winding through the sandy mountains and finding so many surprisingly charming places.
While it looks a bit shocking to Americans raised within the confines of the typical, homogeneous residential suburb, the i3 seems perfectly at home in a European city like Amsterdam, where there are dramatic expressions of hyper - intensive design everywhere you look — the
colorful, plastic - y forms of the modernist
housing along the shores of the inland lakes and canals, the small, city - friendly cars, and even the street signs.
Colorful, wooden
houses and huts are scattered
along the beachfront, none of them reaching above the palm trees, none of them screaming big tourist resort at you.
If you are a photography lover you'll enjoy walking
along picturesque streets of Melaka, taking photos of
colorful houses, rickshaws and their passengers, locals sitting in multiple street cafes and boats cruising up and down the river.
Stroll
along the cobblestone streets of the old town where you'll discover white - washed and red - tile roofed
houses dripping with
colorful bougainvillea and a wide array of enticing shops, cozy cafes and lively night spots.
For a room in my
house that had no door, I came up with an idea to make a
colorful paint chip DIY curtain for it
along the lines of the kind that kids and teenagers like to have hanging in their rooms?