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Completed Project
Talaulim, Goa, India

Saint Anne Church

The Church of Saint Anne, also known as Sant'Ana or Santana Church, is the parish church of the small village of Talaulim, located about 10 miles from Panjim, the capital of Goa.
Patiala, India

Quila Mubarak

Designed around the idea of coexistence of the religious and secular, a core principle of the Sikh faith, the Quila Mubarak remains the most rare and outstanding example of Sikh palace architecture.
Completed Project
Kinnaur Region, Himachal Pradesh, India

Nako Temples

Situated 3,600 meters above the Spiti River, Nako is one of the most isolated villages on earth.
Delhi, India

Lutyens Bungalow Zone

In 1911, the British Government of India decided to move the country's administrative capital from Calcutta to Delhi, inaugurating New Delhi in 1931.
Jaipur, India

Jantar Mantar

Jantar Mantar is one of the world's most accurate pre-modern observatories, and attests eighteenth-century efforts to improve understanding of planetary and other cosmic movements.
Spiti Valley, India

Dhangkar Gompa

The Dhangkar Gompa is one of five major Buddhist monastic centers in the remote region of Spiti near the Tibetan border.
Karaikudi, Tamil Nadu, India

Chettinad

Established by the Chettiars, a caste of traders who flourished in nineteenth-century India, Chettinad is famous for its opulent palaces and temples.
Completed Project
Panchmahal, India

Champaner-Pavagadh

In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the city of Champaner was an important post along the trade route linking the states of Malwa and Gujarat in western India.
Bhuj, India

Bhuj Darbargadh

The walled city of Bhuj was the capital of the princely state of Kutch in the Gujarat.
Turony, Hungary

Turony Church

Originally built as a single-nave masonry church in the thirteenth century, Túrony Church, in a Village just south of Pees, is among the earliest surviving structures representing Hungarian statehood.
Completed Project
Peten, Guatemala

Piedras Negras

Piedras Negras (Black Stones) was the capital of a Maya kingdom that stretched along the banks of Central America’s Usumacinta River between the 4th century BC and the 9th century AD.
Sayaxche, Guatemala

Ceibal Archaeological Site

A center of power during two critical periods in the history of Maya civilization—the Late Preclassic (300 BC-AD 250).

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