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Civita Di Bagnoregio
Civita di Bagnoregio, Italy

Civita Di Bagnoregio

The soft volcanic rock upon which Civita di Bagnoregio, nicknamed the “dying city,” is built is slowly crumbling away.
Quinta Hereen
Lima, Peru

Quinta Heeren

Once part of an affluent residential area, the Quinta Heeren started to decay in the 1930s.
The theater, after restoration, 2016. Photo: Nelson Garrido.
Lisbon, Portugal

Teatro Capitólio

The Teatro Capitólio is an invaluable part of Portugal’s Modernist architectural heritage and its history of cinema.
Completed Project
Cuauhtinchan/Puebla, Mexico

San Juan Bautista in Cuauhtinchan

The San Juan Bautista convent was built on the site of a 12th-century Tolteca-Chichimeca foundation to support the religious conversion of indigenous populations shortly after the Spanish Conquest.
Completed Project
Morelos, Mexico

Chalcatzingo

Established around 1500 BC, Chalcatzing is an important prehistoric site in central Mexico that initially developed as a small agricultural community.
Suakin Island, Sudan

Suakin

Suakin Island, located in north-eastern Sudan, was a crucial Red Sea port from Egyptian times until the early twentieth century.
Luang Prabang, Laos

Chom Phet Cultural Landscape

The cultural landscape of Chom Phet is threatened by aggressive jungle vegetation and dramatically increased tourism.
Helsinki, Finland

Helsinki-Malmi Airport

The Helsinki-Malmi Airport was one of the most modern aerodromes of its time, but today plans are in motion to turn the site into a housing development.
Tripoli, Lebanon

International Fairground

Oscar Niemeyer’s design for the International Fairground was intended to serve as a showcase for Lebanon and signal the modern vision for the country’s development.
Chinguetti, Mauritania

Chinguetti Mosque

Surrounded and sometimes nearly engulfed by the shifting dunes of the western Sahara, Chinguetti was established in the thirteenth century and is considered one of Islam's seven holy cities.
Lima, Peru

Presbitero Maestro Cemetery

Commissioned by Viceroy Fernando de Abascal and built between 1805 and 1808 on the outskirts of Lima, the Presbítero Maestro was the first municipal cemetery in Latin America.

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