Travel Briefs

In early June, the city of Venice, Italy, banned the opening of new hotels in the city center in an attempt to stem the tide of tourists flocking to the city each year. The ban does not prevent new hotels from opening on the outlying islands or on the mainland. Each year, Venice, which has a population of 55,000, attracts nearly 30 million tourists. At the time of the new hotel ban, the city center had 25,400 rooms for let. In addition to the moratorium on hotels, Venice — in...

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Visitors caught taking photographs in the Alpine village of Bravuogn, or Bergün — located in Switzerland’s eastern canton of Graubünden — would be fined CHF5 (near $5), it was announced on May 30. Bravuogn officials said the fines were meant to keep people off of social media and make visiting the town a more pleasant experience. The village’s director of tourism admitted that it was unlikely anyone would actually be levied the fine.

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The Loen Skylift, one of the steepest aerial trams in the world, began operation on May 20 in northern Norway’s Nordfjord area. Picking up 35 to 40 people every 30 minutes, each enclosed lift takes five to seven minutes to travel 3,300 feet up from the waters’ edge to Mount Hoven. At the top is the cliffside Hoven Restaurant. The “handicap-friendly” Skylift operates daily, 9 a.m.-10 p.m., from July 1 to Aug. 20 and from 9 to 6 all other dates in the year. A round...

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On the Franklin Expedition in 1845, searching for the Northwest Passage, the ships HMS Erebus and HMS Terror entered Canadian waters and were never heard from again. Though camps and graves were found by rescue parties, the ships remained lost for over 150 years. Erebus was discovered in 2014 in shallow water near King William Island in Canada’s Nunavut Territory. Two years later, Terror was discovered nearby. Until Jan. 7, 2018, artifacts recovered from the ships will be on...

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You can learn about more than 400 years of English gardening by visiting London’s Garden Museum (Lambeth Palace Rd., London, SE1 7LB, U.K.; phone +44 20 7401 8865, www.gardenmuseum.org.uk). Opened in 1977, the museum is housed in the formerly abandoned church St Mary-at-Lambeth, the burial place of 17th-century royal gardener John Tradescant the elder and his botanist son, John the younger. Its permanent gardening collection of 6,000 items includes tools, literature, artworks and...

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In honor of Canada’s sesquicentennial in 2017, the Canadian Mint has released a glow-in-the-dark “toonie,” or 2-dollar coin. It is the world’s first glow-in-the-dark coin created for general circulation. The obverse face of the coin depicts Queen Elizabeth II, while the reverse is an image of two people canoeing underneath a glowing display of the northern lights.

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The oldest-extant surgical theater, located in the attic of an 18th-century church, can be visited in London. The newly refurbished Old Operating Theatre Museum (9a St. Thomas Street, London, England, SE1 9RY, U.K.; phone +44 020 7188 2679, oldoperatingtheatre.com) dates to 1822, when it became the surgery room for the St. Thomas Church Hospital. Still present are the wooden bed where surgeries were performed (without the benefit of anesthetics or antibiotics) and the surrounding...

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Train Suite Shiki-Shima, a new luxury train operated by Japan Rail East (www.jreast.co.jp), made its maiden journey on the island of Hokkaido, Japan, on May 1. The train’s 10 cars include seven 2-story sleeping cars (with three suite options), two observatory cars, a lounge car and a 2-story gourmet restaurant. Each car’s exterior and interior are designed by car designers from Porsche, Ferrari and Maserati.The 17-berth train offers two overnight trips (4-day/3-night and 2-...

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