Travel Briefs

Starting in early 2014 at select subway stations in Beijing, China, the city began instituting airport-like security measures, including metal detectors, x-ray machines and pat-downs, causing long wait times at the busiest stations. Antiterrorism security procedures were upgraded in three more stations in May, bringing the total up to nine.

Beijing’s subway system comprises nearly 200 stations.

Scandinavian Airlines, or SAS (800/221-2350), has simplified and reduced its checked-luggage charges. To qualify for the lower charges, you must purchase your ticket online or from a ticket machine in the airport. 

In addition to one free 23-kilogram (55-pound) bag (32 kilograms, near 71 pounds, in business class), checked-bag costs are now €25 (near $43, a 38% reduction) on domestic flights, €45 (down 31%) for European flights and €75 (down 25%) on intercontinental flights....

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Sections of the Taj Mahal in Agra, Uttar Pradesh, northern India, will undergo a mud-pack treatment in an effort to reverse pollution damage that is yellowing the white marble building. Authorities began discussing this in June, with no starting date set yet.

Affected portions of the Taj Mahal will be covered in lime-rich clay overnight. The clay will be removed with soft nylon brushes and distilled water, hopefully taking stains and grime along with it. The process will be done one...

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Restoration work on Rome’s Trevi Fountain began June 5. Part of the city’s campaign to clean and repair some of its public antiquities, the work, funded by fashion company Fendi, is expected to last 18 months.

Visitors will be able to watch the restoration from behind a metal barrier or from a walkway constructed above the central part of the fountain. The water was drained for the restoration, but people still will be allowed to toss coins in the fountain for luck.

In Florence, Italy, cracks in the feet of Michelangelo’s statue of David threaten its survival. The 17-foot-tall figure on a 6-foot base, which had stood in Florence’s Piazzo della Signoria since 1504, was moved into a domed room at the Galleria dell’Accademia in 1873. (A replica still stands in the piazzo.)

The cracks, first noticed during a restoration of the statue in 2004, have been blamed on a number of factors, including the quality of the marble, the positioning of the legs and...

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Open until March 31, 2015, in London, the exhibit “Aerofilms: Britain From Above” showcases Aerofilms, Ltd.’s, archive of 95,000 aerial photographs of Britain and Europe from the firm’s beginnings in 1919 through World War II. 

It’s being held at the Royal Air Force Museum: London (Grahame Park Way, London, NW9 5LL, U.K.; phone +44 8205 2266 or [24-hour info line] +44 20 8358 4964), which sits beside the former site of the London Aerodrome, a private airfield built in 1911. About a 10...

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For cultural attractions situated around Amsterdam’s Museumplein, through 2014, a ticket package grants purchasers entry into the Rijksmuseum, Stedelijk Museum and Van Gogh Museum and a concert at the Royal Concertgebouw (even for sold-out concerts), all for €90 (near $123).

Buy Museumplein tickets at 5-star hotels in the city, including Hotel De L’Europe (Nieuwe Doelenstraat 2-14; phone +31 20 531 1777), the Conservatorium Hotel (Van Baerlestraat 27; phone +31 20 570 0000) and the...

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The Museum of Anatolian Civilization (Gözcü Sokak 2, Ankara, Turkey; phone +312 324 31 60) reopened all of its sections on June 9 after completing restorations begun in 2011. 

The museum, which won Best European Museum honors in 1997, contains artifacts from every period of human occupation in Anatolia, from Paleolithic to modern day. Open 8:30 a.m.-7 p.m. daily April through Oct. and 8:30-5:30 daily Nov. through March. Entry, TRY15 (near $7).