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Coolest Underground Travel Spots

TIME : 2016/2/29 18:51:24
Coolest Underground Travel Spots © <a href="http://www.icecaves.com" class="external" rel="nofollow">Paul Gordon</a> Coolest Underground Travel Spots Go beneath the earth's surface to uncover history and adventure.

See our slideshow of 10 of the Coolest Underground Travel Spots.

While walking in the West Virginia woods in 1978, Dr. Robert Conte saw something that made him stop in his tracks: an aluminum door between green cement walls. With an ominous feeling, he quickly turned around and walked straight back to The Greenbrier, where he had just been hired as the hotel’s historian.

Dr. Conte had heard the rumors—everyone working at the luxury resort had—about an underground bunker built by the government during the Cold War that was said to exist somewhere on the property. “It didn’t take long around here to figure out that you didn’t want to bring the subject of the bunker up—it wasn’t a good career move,” says Conte.

Exposed in a Washington Post story that broke in 1992, the long-standing secret of the 120,000-square-foot “Government Relocation Facility” built for members of the U.S. Congress was out. Hidden in plain sight, part of it was even in continual use as a convention center and theater for Greenbrier guests. Gaudy wallpaper hid iron doors that could withstand a 30-ton blast. “I walk in and out of that space all of the time,” says Dr. Conte. “Now it’s obvious it was there.” Today, more than 33,000 people visit annually.

  • See our slideshow of 10 of the Coolest Underground Travel Spots.

Underground exploration is part adventure, part history, and part plain curiosity. “Often, it’s like discovering something that’s slipped through time to the present day. It brings history to life,” says Steve Duncan, an urban explorer whose work takes him underground to the abandoned subway tunnels, empty tombs, and unused aqueducts in New York City, and who was part of the Discovery Channel’s short-lived television series “Urban Explorers.” Over the past decade, Duncan says he’s seen a real growth in the public’s desire to investigate what’s below the surface. “Part of what makes it exciting is that there’s always more to dig up.”

To this end, travelandleisure.com has excavated some of the world’s coolest must-see subterranean destinations. Take Wieliczka, Poland’s 13th-century salt mine turned museum; 1,072 feet underground, it has a grandiose concert hall, chandeliers, and even a life-size rock-salt sculpture of Pope John Paul II. Or, the 3,400-year-old Ice Caves of New Mexico, known to settlers as the “Desert Ice Box,” where a 20-foot-thick sheath glows bright green from the algae that lies beneath.

Some spots were discovered by accident, like the Basilica Cistern, built in Istanbul in the 4th century A.D. using 336 mismatched columns taken from the ruins of the buildings conquered by Constantine. Eighty-two feet below ground, the former royal reservoir was unearthed in 1545 by a Frenchman in search of Byzantine artifacts. It fell into disrepair again, but was reopened to the public in 1987 for tours.

Meanwhile, other locations, like Kentucky’s Mammoth Cave, have been in constant use for a long time. The world’s longest cavern is filled with “mummies” and evidence of prehistoric man. In the Dambulla Cave Temple in Sri Lanka, Buddhist monks have meditated since the 1st century B.C. And who knows?Montreal’s Underground City, a 4.5-square-mile modern marvel with shops, apartments, and a chapel, may be rediscovered centuries from now, lending insight into Canadian culture, and man’s ingenuity when it came to keeping warm during brutally cold winters.

These places remind us sometimes that what we see on the surface tells only part of the story. Who really knows how many adventures lie under our feet?

  • See our slideshow of 10 of the Coolest Underground Travel Spots.