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1205 of 1223 WHS have been reviewed by our community.


Bunce Island (T)

Mihai Dascalu Romania - 17-Mar-25

Bunce Island (T)

I am now on a Lupine tour in March 2025. Even though it was not on the schedule, five of us payed extra to get here and we're taken there by Bassie from Lupine West Africa +232 76 947442. From Freetown it is more than an hour on a speedboat (what the locals call a speedboat, just a bigger dingy with a Honda engine). You go up on Sierra Leone River, passing by the ferry loading, passing by a railroad that ends up half way above the river and it is used by Chinese to load the iron ore. Then passing by Tasso Island, much bigger and full of locals. 

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San Juan de Ulua (T)

Little Lauren Travels USA - 16-Mar-25

In search of UNESCO sites, I have certainly visited more Spanish and Portuguese forts than any sane person would.  And there’s not much unique about this one.  However, it is similar to many enlisted properties and it was very historically important.   To be exact, this is the oldest Spanish fort in North America (started in 1535) and was one of the most important during the colonial era, since Veracruz was the main seaport connecting Central America and Spain during the colonial era.  Therefore I give this a thumbs up as a nomination. Given the revamped listing in 2022, I could see Mexico moving forward with a nomination

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Workers’ Assembly Halls (Argentina) (T)

J_neveryes Canada - 17-Mar-25

Workers’ Assembly Halls (Argentina) (T)

On a Wednesday morning (March 2025), I observed that the CGT building was open.  I asked a man at the reception desk if my partner and I can take a look at the lobby.  After taking a few photos and as we were about to leave, the man at the reception asked it we would like to see the "salas" and directed another staff person - who spoke no English - to take us around.

The voluntold guide then took us up a flight of stairs to Salon Felipe Vallesse, which is a medium sized auditorium

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Møns Klint (T)

Philipp Peterer Switzerland - 18-Mar-25

Møns Klint (T)

Møns Klint claims its OUV from the glacial landscape formation and being part of one of the world's largest glaciotectonic complexes. But much more significant what is described as “scenic value”, which means the cliff is simply nice to look at.

As the aesthetics are a big part of this, I selected a day for the visit I knew the sun would shine

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Møns Klint (T)

Szabolcs Mosonyi Hungary - 14-Mar-25

Møns Klint (T)

I visited Møns Klint on a beautiful summer day in 2016, followed by Stevns Klint (WHS) later that same day. While both are impressive, I remember talking to my fiancée about how Møns Klint should be a WHS (it wasn't even a TWHS at the time). It brings me again to a question I often wonder: some sites really have it all, but what makes a great WHS otherwise? Is it more about being spectacular even to a visitor who lacks background knowledge about the site's significance? Or does real value lie in historic/scientific/religious importance? 

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Blog Travel in general

Travel Windows of Opportunity

I have been thinking lately about “Windows of Opportunity”, and whether they truly exist in a travel planning context. Windows of Opportunity are circumstances that suddenly present themselves and that may not happen again – so you need to react promptly to take advantage. This could be because an armed conflict ends or travel bans get lifted. For example: after the recent regime change in Syria, the Ancient Villages of Northern Syria have become accessible for the first time in about 14 years (trips to Serjella and Al-Bara are advertised). And a first international group visited North Korea in February 2025 after 5 years of Covid-closure. 

I wonder however what these opportunities across a lifetime of WH Travel really mean. Should you go to Syria now in 2025 and put yourself on the waitlist for North Korea?

Windows of countries and sites

With the recent reopening of North Korea, every country is theoretically visitable again (though getting a tourist visa to Sudan or Niger may be tough). (Un)fortunately, as WH Travellers we need to get much deeper into a country than a border or a capital, so certainly not every WHS is visitable at the moment. 

To gain an understanding of the impact of country and site "closures", let’s have a look at a few examples from the US naughty list:

  • Iraq: Tourism to Iraq in general has almost always continued over the past difficult decades, but the numbers were mostly in Iraqi Kurdistan and at the Shia holy sites. Most WHS were off-limits during the US-led invasion of 2003 and its ISIS aftermath as they were right in the battle zones (it must be noted that 4 out of the 6 were only inscribed after 2003, so they wouldn’t have featured in WH travel plans anyway). Hatra and Ashur (Photo 1, credits to Clyde) took the longest to reopen; take a look again at how Thomas and Wojciech did it in 2021
  • Libya: The Libyan Civil War started in 2011, afterwards tourism hasn’t really returned although you can get in again since 2021, first on business visas and now on an erratic tourist visa process. All WHS are accessible, even the one in East Libya.
  • North Korea: Group tours to its WHS were common until Covid hit (2020) and are expected to restart soon (though the border town that reopened in February 2025 unexpectedly closed again in March, according to Koryo Tours).
  • Sudan: It has been on the US list since 2011, but its WHS have only been practically impossible to visit since the start of the Sudanese Civil War in 2023. It was a fairly mainstream destination before that (Photo 2 shows its excellent WHS of Meroë).
  • Syria: The Civil War started in 2011; in 2015, “Iranian religious tourism was all that remained” (source). However, Damascus has always stayed open and in late 2016, many areas came back under central government control; 5 out of the 6 WHS have been visitable since, mostly on group tours, and, as mentioned above, in 2025, all can be done. 
  • Yemen: The WHS of Socotra and Shibam are accessible and have been so for years. Sanaa and other inland sites have been off-limits since the Houthi takeover in 2014.

And at some notorious single WHS:

  • Afghanistan, notably the Minaret of Jam: located in a Taliban hotbed and probably unvisited by outsiders between 2001 and 2021
  • Democratic Republic of Congo, notably Virunga NP (Photo 3): The park is actually well-managed and has a good tourist infrastructure, but it lies in a highly flammable region with the presence of armed militia in and near the park, leading to frequent closures since its relaunch for tourism in 2014. 
  • Mali, Tomb of Askia: The area around Gao has had security issues since at least 2012 (it was even sketchy before), but Tripadvisor reviews show that people still trickled in until 2019.  

A need to act immediately or FOMO?

What we can learn from these examples is that inaccessibility caused by armed conflict and security issues generally doesn’t last for more than 5-10 years. Wars will eventually end, and tourist facilities are often quickly restored to their former glory, as everybody loves hard currency. Individual WHS, though, may stay out of reach for 10-20 years.

So I consider these not as true “Windows of Opportunity” as they do not generally open for a short period only. They are more like cyclic events with rather unpredictable timelines. You can be sure to get several of those opportunities during a travel life, even for countries with a problematic history. You can look at the Ancient Villages of Northern Syria from the perspective of “they have been inaccessible for 14 years”, but they have been open for 36 years as well during the past 50 years. 50 of our community members managed to visit during those earlier years. 

Psychologically, the unpredictability of it all, the fear of “the window might close again on short notice”, pushes travellers into thinking these are once-in-a-lifetime opportunities. Hypes on social media strongly contribute to this FOMO. 

But keep in mind: When a country or region reopens after conflict, what will you encounter? Some people like to feel the optimism, witness history firsthand, or are lovers of Dark Tourism (seeing ruined cities, tanks left by the roadside, etc). But – especially keeping WHS in mind - how good will your visit be? The site may have been damaged during the war, may not have had its regular maintenance for years, site interpretation may have faded away, and the contents of the site museum are still packed away in boxes: it is probably not at its best. 

My take on this is that I plan my trips in the order of the most appealing to me first. If a site I am especially attracted to has an “open window”, I will try to use it (as I did with Virunga). But I'd rather wait for Sanaa and a full Yemen trip being possible than rush to Shibam. There’s no harm in waiting a couple of years or even for the next cycle: the visitor experience may be much better.

Do you immediately act upon perceived Travel Windows of Opportunity?

Els - 30 March 2025

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