Travel Briefs

Dealing with the heat on board the trains of London’s nearly 150-year-old Underground system has been a problem, especially in summer. The problem is that heat generated by conventional air-conditioning has to go somewhere.

Transport for London is working on multiple solutions, including improving existing ventilation shafts; tapping into underground aquifers to create water-based heat-exchange systems, and “hydro cooling,” using ice reservoirs and fan units.

As the...

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The family home in Wales where the poet Dylan Thomas lived and wrote for many years can be rented.

In Swansea, 40 miles northwest of Cardiff, the 4-bedroom house is set up as in the 1910s when Thomas lived. Furnishings are of the Edwardian era, and although there is an inside bathroom, heat, gas and electricity, there is no phone, TV, refrigerator or microwave.

The house sleeps six, with rates from £750 mid-week, £1,000 (near $1,455) weekend and £1,500 full week (Friday to...

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Aurora Expeditions (Level 2, 88 George St., The Rocks, NSW 2000, Australia; phone +61 2 9252 1033, fax 9252 1373, www.auroraexpeditions.com.au), on selected Antarctic cruises, allows passengers to camp under the stars on the ice at no extra cost. Among cruises that offer this is the 12-day “Climbers and Kayakers” cruise, Dec. 7-18, at $6,090-$10,390. 

In Hong Kong’s Victoria Harbor, on every night with good weather there is a light show involving 44 of the city’s waterfront skyscrapers. The 14-minute “A Symphony of Lights” starts at 8 p.m. and uses orchestrated lasers and lights set to music.

Good places to view the show (and where there is narration in English on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays) include sightseeing ferries and the “Avenue of the Stars” on the Tsim Sha Tsui waterfront. It also can be viewed at the waterfront...

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The rock fortress archaeological site of Sigiriya in Sri Lanka was closed temporarily in April after wasps attacked tourists three times in one week. Dozens of people who were stung were taken to hospitals. The problem occurred each of the previous two years in May.

George Frideric Handel (1685-1759) spent the last 36 years of his life in London. His home in Mayfair is today the Handel House Museum (25 Brook St., Mayfair, London, W1K 4HB, U.K.; phone +44 [0] 20 7495 1685, www.handelhouse.org), where, in honor of the 250th anniversary of the composer’s death, the exhibit “Handel Reveal’d” is being held through Oct. 25, 2009.

Among exhibits are a life mask, scores in Handel’s own hand, shopping lists and information about his many illustrious...

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Two events in France in 2009 honor artist Pablo Picasso.

• Through Sept. 27 at Musée Granet (place Saint-Jean de Malte, 13100 Aix-en-Provence; phone 00 33 [0] 4 42 52 87 97, www.museegranet-aixprovence.fr), the show “Picasso-Cézanne” features 100-plus sculptures, paintings and etchings which focus on the influence of Cézanne on 20th-century artists, particularly Picasso. Open 9-7 Friday-Wednesday and noon-11 p.m. Thursday. €10 ($13). 

• Also through Sept. 27, Picasso’s home...

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The Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities announced plans to develop and protect the site of Dahshur. The site has five major pyramids as well as many private tombs and some royal tombs. The project includes cleaning and restoring monuments, providing barriers to control access, creating safe zones around the sites and building tourist facilities. 

A spokesman for the Supreme Council said they hope to open the “Bent Pyramid” to visitors this summer and, within a year, open another...

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