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New York’s $40 million attraction puts world in miniature

- AFP

In troubling political times, New York’s latest tourist attraction offers visitors internatio­nal escapism – a $40 million installati­on of 50 nations in miniature: a kind of Gulliver’s Travels for the 21st century.

Four years in the making and now open for previews just off Times Square, Gulliver’s Gate hopes to draw a million visitors a year to its Lilliputia­n-style world crafted by hundreds of artists around the world.

Where else can you find Mecca, the Taj Mahal, the Panama Canal and the Beatles walking across Abbey Road under one roof? Not to mention China’s Forbidden City, Brazil’s Christ the Redeemer statue and Jerusalem’s Old City.

There is to be an interactiv­e airport, with planes taking off and landing, miniature trains zipping up and down tracks, 10,000 vehicles and a gondola gliding along a glassy green Grand Canal in Venice.

Manhattan is displayed in astonishin­g detail: famous landmarks alongside paramedics attending an accident, families relaxing in living rooms behind apartment windows and a Louis Vuitton store.

In London, visitors can listen to Adele, The Clash or the Beatles at an outdoor concert complete with a TV screen, flashing lights and parkland thumping up and down as the miniature crowd enjoy the music.

“Incredible!” said Nathaniel Deutsch, 64, an attorney based in Washington who was in New York to catch some shows on Broadway, as he looked round. “This is fantastic, I have goose-bumps. It’s amazing.”

But it opens as NYC & Company, the official marketing organizati­on for New York, predicts 300,000 fewer internatio­nal visitors in 2017 in the wake of US President Donald Trump’s attempted travel bans “and related rhetoric” – which would be the first decline since 2008 and the global financial crash.

‘Lot of competitio­n’

US’ cultural capital is stuffed with iconic attraction­s from the Statue of Liberty to the Empire State Building and Broadway, not to mention dozens of museums, Central Park, the Brooklyn Bridge and Times Square.

To put Gulliver Gate’s hopes into context, the Metropolit­an Museum of Art last year received a record 6.7 million visitors.

“It’s just the beginning,” co-founder Michael Langer noted, saying that the inspiratio­n came from Miniatur Wunderland in Germany, which calls itself the largest model railway in the world.

“Our team is already in the process of developing new regions and countries to add ... There is much more to come,” said Langer.

For an extra $44, on top of the entry fee, visitors can get scanned and have a 3D replica of themselves placed alongside the roughly 100,000 miniature figures already in the exhibit.

It is the work of artisans from all over the world: Teams in New York, Argentina, Jerusalem, Beijing, Italy and Saint Petersburg modeled their regions.

“You’ve got a lot of competitio­n, but I’ve never seen anything like it,” said retiree and radio personalit­y Michael Rubin, 67, one of those taking advantage of marginally cheaper ticket prices

ahead of the May 9 launch.

 ?? Photos: AFP ?? Clockwise from top left: Miniature models of the Brooklyn Bridge, a Paris street, the Forbidden City and the Louvre are on display at the Gulliver’s Gate exhibition in New York City on April 13.
Photos: AFP Clockwise from top left: Miniature models of the Brooklyn Bridge, a Paris street, the Forbidden City and the Louvre are on display at the Gulliver’s Gate exhibition in New York City on April 13.
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