Australia has plans for the world’s biggest hotel !!!

The proposed $8.15 billion Aquis Great Barrier Reef Resort planned for Yorkeys Knob in Ca

The proposed $8.15 billion Aquis Great Barrier Reef Resort planned for Yorkeys Knob in Cairns. Source: Supplied

WHEN you think of the world’s biggest hotels, you usually conjure up images of the main strip of Vegas.

However plans for the world’s biggest hotel have been submitted right here in Australia.

The $8.15 billion Aquis project was put forward by Hong Kong billionaire Tony Fung for a six star hotel and casino with 7500 rooms just outside of Cairns.

However the grand plans have come to a grinding halt as Queensland’s Gaming Commission refused to speed up its approval for the takeover bid of Reef Casino Trust, which owns Reef Hotel Casino in Cairns, as part of the project.

The proposed resort is to sit over a lagoon complex.

The proposed resort is to sit over a lagoon complex. Source: Supplied

Proposed design of the casino lobby with an aquarium.

Proposed design of the casino lobby with an aquarium. Source: Supplied

The decision to grant regulatory approval for the proposed takeover expires on November 28 and Aquis says it will not extend meaning the offer will lapse. Plans for the resort are likely to still go ahead.

Caught up in red tape, Far North Queensland civic and business leaders yesterday urged the Newman Government to hasten the process and support tourism.

The resort is planned on a former sugar cane farm in Yorkey’s Knob, 15km north of Cairns, and is to feature an 18 hole golf course and lagoon.

Aboriginal artwork is to decorate its walls.

Aboriginal artwork is to decorate its walls. Source: Supplied

Imagine the housekeeping for 7500 rooms.

Imagine the housekeeping for 7500 rooms. Source: Supplied

The property at Yorkeys Knob which will be the site of the proposed $4.2 billion AQUIS Gr

The property at Yorkeys Knob which will be the site of the proposed $4.2 billion AQUIS Great Barrier Reef Resort. Picture: Mccormack Marc Source: News Corp Australia

Currently the biggest hotel in Australia is the Four Points by Sheraton Sydney with 682 rooms, meaning the proposed resort would be a whopping 11 times bigger.

The Four Points by Sheraton, Sydney takes the gong as Australia’s biggest. Picture: NSW D

The Four Points by Sheraton, Sydney takes the gong as Australia’s biggest. Picture: NSW Department of Planning.Source: Supplied

A look at the world’s biggest hotels

MGM Grand, Las Vegas

Rooms: 6,852

The MGM Grand is one of the hotels / casinos on the Las Vegas strip

The MGM Grand is one of the hotels / casinos on the Las Vegas strip Source: Getty Images

First World Hotel, Malaysia

Rooms: 6,118

Ambassador City, Thailand

Rooms: 4,219

The Venetian, Las Vegas

Rooms: 4,027

The Venetian hotel and casino is like a floating city.

The Venetian hotel and casino is like a floating city. Source: Supplied

Excalibur, Las Vegas

Rooms: 3,981

Which pool should you swim at today?

Which pool should you swim at today? Source: Supplied 

SOURCE::::news.com.au

Natarajan

 

Incredible Airports in India ….You Must See !!!

Agatti Airport

Agatti Airport

1. Agatti Airport, Lakshadweep


source:fsairport.net

HolidayIQ Traveller Gautam Barman says, “Agatti is a small island and hence, one can enjoy the sea, the lagoons and the beach. You can go to Bangaram and enjoy a full day there. It is about an hour’s journey by boat. Make sure that the permit and formalities are taken care of beforehand.”

Surrounded by nothing but the Indian Ocean, the 4,000-foot-long Agatti Airport is so random and petite that it could pass off as a piece of a larger runway lost at sea. The airport is the only one in Lakshadweep – a Indian Union Territory comprising 36 exotic islands located off of the southwestern coast of India, and sits on the island of Agatti.

2. Lengpui Airport, Mizoram


source:sevendiary.com

HolidayIQ Traveller Dharmender Singh says, “The nearest airport to Mizoram is Lengpui airport. To enter Mizoram by any means inner line permit is required. At airport ILP counter is there were ILP is issued on arrival.”

The 2,500 metre runway of the Lengpui airport is unique as it has many hilly streams running und

 

3. Kushok Bakula Rimpochee Airport, Leh


source:flickr.com

HolidayIQ Traveller Jayesh from Kolkata says, “Leh is beautiful and is known as the cold desert. Drass, the second coldest place in the world, and Khardungla, known as the world’s highest motorable road, are a must visit. Things that one should not miss while in Leh – Lamayuru, Thiksey Monastery, double-humped camels at Hunder, sand dunes, Diskit Monastery, Shyok River and shopping in Leh.”

Kushok Bakula Rimpochhe Airport is an airport in Leh. It’s one of the highest airports in the world at 3,256 m (10,682 ft) above sea level.

 

4. Jubbarhatti Airport, Shimla


source: dailymail.co.uk

“The state, with many a snow-bound Himalayan peak, has some of the most spectacular landscapes in the country. It also has some very popular holiday resorts which are easily accessible. Apart from sightseeing, it offers immense scope for trekking, skiing and rafting. Shivalik, Dhauladhar and Pir Panjal are the major mountain ranges in the state,” says HolidayIQ Traveller Peaceman Travel.

Shimla Airport is located in Jabarhatti, 22 kilometres from Shimla. The airport was constructed by cutting down a mountaintop and levelling the area to form the single runway. The small apron has space for two small aircrafts to park simultaneously.

 

5. Mumbai’s Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport


source:quoracdn.net

It showcases to the world the beauty of Indian art and design. Unlike other museums, you would need an international air ticket to enter — this museum with nearly 7,000 artefacts, a 3 km-long art wall and works by over 1,500 artists, is actually housed inside an airport! Somewhere between check-in and baggage claim, Mumbai’s new integrated terminal T2 shows off some of the best of Indian arts and craft to foreign visitors as well as Indians.

Dabolim Airport, Goa


source:thepointsguy.com

HolidayIQ Traveller Nikhil says, “Airport of Goa is marvellous in its own. It has cafes and shops to keep the passengers busy but the items are quite expensive.”

Goa International Airport, more commonly known as Dabolim Airport, is located in the city of Dabolim. It is one of the most beautiful airports in India. It offers a breathtaking view of the Arabian Sea.

LZ-129 Hindenburg: …Airships Which Ruled The Skies Prior to Airliners !!!

Prior to the age of the airliner, Zeppelin airships ruled the skies over the north Atlantic — connecting cities like New York with Western Europe. Zeppelin’s fleet of airships included such colossal creations like the Graf Zeppelin and the Hindenburg  along with the less famous Graf Zeppelin II.

Before the modern jumbo jet and its first class suites, the biggest and grandest thing in luxury air travel was the German Zeppelin Airship.

Of all the massive Zeppelin’s constructed, the most famous was the Hindenburg. The Hindenburg was designed to ferry passengers across the Atlantic in serenity, with the dirigible floating smoothly through the clouds.

The Hindenburg was the first of two “Hindenburg” Class airships constructed by the Zeppelin Company. Construction of the airship began in 1931 and was completed in 1936. The Hindenburg, along with its highly successful predecessor, the Graf Zeppelin, made numerous trans-Atlantic crossings in their brief but illustrious career.

Constructed out of an aluminum alloy called duralumin, the Hindenburg’s massive frame work was filled with 7 tons of hydrogen. Hydrogen is much lighter than air, and allows the massive Zeppelin to carry more people in greater levels of luxury. However, with an ignition source, an oxidizer, and right concentration, hydrogen can also be incredibly flammable.

The Hindenburg entered passenger service in May of 1936 and carrier up 50 passengers in luxury across the Atlantic.

The legend of the Hindenburg’s luxurious amenities are well know, but most have not seen them in living color. So take the opportunity to check out these wonderful photos of the Zeppelin’s passengers spaces courtesy of airships.net and the German Federal Archive.

 http://www.airships.net/hindenburg/interiors
 SOURCE :::: http://www.airships.net/hindenburg/
Natarajan

 

Is This the World’s Highest Selfie !!!…

Taking the selfie craze to extraordinary heights, a British photographer has clicked himself atop Dubai’s Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest skyscraper.

47-year-old Gerald Donovan took incredible pictures of himself from the top of the world’s tallest skyscraper which could be the world’s highest selfie, the Telegraph reported.

The UAE-based photographer took the images as part of his Dubai 360 project, which involved taking a virtual tour of the city and also a set of panoramas from the top of the world-famous 2,722 feet tall building.

Besides taking photos, Donovan was able to capture some pretty incredible video as well including a fish-eye video which depicts Dubai as its very own planet.

The photographer said this was the first selfie he had ever decided to take and share.

He used a special panoramic camera controlled by an iPhone app to capture the picture.

SOURCE:::: http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

This Man Set the Parallel Parking World Record !!!

This Man Set the Parallel Parking World Record

Living in big cities might be great for your professional growth, however, you do fear the weekend, for it is the time when you get out onto crowded roads to shop or just roam around. You have to remember though that you take your car out and the biggest problem is parking your car.

But parking is no problem for Chinese wheelman Han Yue as he has done the seemingly impossible by breaking the tightest car parallel parking record. The Guinness Book of World Records has given its official nod to this feat too. Han managed to neatly slide his way into a gap measuring just 8 cm or 3.15 inch longer than the MINI 3 Door Hatch he was driving.

To give you an understanding of what all that is, the gap was probably smaller than the length of your smartphone. Han’s feat shaves off 0.6cm from British driver Alastair Moffatt’s record set back in July 2013 of 8.6 cm or 3.4 inch. The Chinese stunt driver has previously held the title in 2012 after manoeuvring into a gap of 15 cm (5.91 in).

video link….

SOURCE::::: Ameya Naik in http://www.auto.ndtv.com

Natarajan

In Vrindavan, work is on to build the world’s tallest religious structure…Krishna Temple !!!

Model of the Krishna temple planned at Vrindavan Picture by Sanjay K Sharma

The capsule elevator will rise up the steel belly of the skyscraper. On its 700-feet journey, it will take visitors past the various universes of Hindu mythology: Svarga Loka, that transitory place for righteous souls; Vaikuntha Loka, the abode of Vishnu; and finally Goloka Vrindavan, the eternal abode of Krishna.

At each stop, visitors will get a three-dimensional, light-and-sound experience of these planetary systems as described in the Vedic scriptures. From here, the elevator will move further up to the viewing gallery at the very top that will have telescopes through which visitors can see the Yamuna, Mathura, Govardhan, Nandgaon and, on a clear day, even the Taj Mahal, 70 km away.

The 70-storey, 210-metre-high Chandrodaya Mandir will be nearly three times the height of Qutub Minar and taller than the Great Pyramid of Giza. Conceptualised by the International Society for Consciousness (ISKCON)-Bangalore, this sprawling 65-acre project intends to put Vrindavan on the world map.

About 2 km from the bustling temple town, on the highway to Mathura, work on the mammoth project, which is shaped like a peacock feather, has started. The foundation stone was laid on March 16, and last week President Pranab Mukherjee performed puja here. Over the next five years, here is how aspires to transform what is today a vast stretch of barren land.

The architecture will be a fusion of western and traditional styles. The intended end result is a skyscraper temple. “The skyscraper is a concept from modern architecture and requires modern technology,” says Chanchalapathi Dasa, project president and vice-president, ISKCON-Bangalore. “And the shikhar, mandap and other structures will be built in the traditional Nagara architectural style which was prevalent in northern India.” The use of marble and glazing in the central structure also reflects this fusion.

World's tallest temple at Vrindavan to stand Thrice as tall as Qutab Minar

 

Chanchalapathi Dasa, project president and vice-president, ISKCON-BangalorePicture by Sanjay K Sharma

While the temple will occupy about 500,000 square feet, close to 700,000 square feet will be meant for education. As ISKCON believes in salvation through devotion to Krishna, as exemplified by Chaitanya Mahaprabhu in the 15th and 16th centuries, the emphasis will be on the knowledge of Krishna that has been assimilated into local cultures across India and represented in dance, art, music, literature, architecture and even cuisine.

The Krishna Heritage Museum will preserve and showcase these varied expressions. The Science and Spirituality Pavilion will present contemporary scientific discoveries and concepts and try to correlate them with some of the concepts present in Indian Vedic literature — the bugbear of modernists. For example, the Bhagavad Gita Expo will offer students an expositional tour and concepts of the Gita “in a way that is appealing to the scientific temper of young people,” says Chanchalapathi.

The oganisation is relying heavily on technology to introduce younger children to Krishna. “The days when grandmothers told stories to children are gone. YouTube and 3D experiences have taken over,” says an ISKCON devotee. This is where “multi-sensory environmental story-telling experiences” will play a key role. The complex will have a climate-controlled, covered Krishna Leela Park spread across 200,000 square feet where children will get 3D experiences of the many acts Krishna performed as a child. An internally reconstructed Yamuna creek with boats will meander through this park.

Around the central complex, ISKCON plans to recreate 12 forests. “Vrindavan was a vana, a forest. But there’s no forest left now,” says Chanchalapathi. ISKCON intends to recreate those forests that find mention in Vedic scriptures in the area called Braj Mandal, a large part of which falls in Uttar Pradesh and some of which is in Rajasthan and Haryana. Each forest had its own kind of flora, fauna, water bodies and caves.

About 28 acres of land around the temple have been earmarked for these forests. For example, Talavana had tal (palm) trees with fruit that Krishna and his cowherd friends are said to have been attracted to. Similarly, there are other forests planned like Bhandiravana with banyan trees, Kumudavana with lotus and lily ponds, and Kamyavana with rocky, mountainous caves. ISKCON has been in consultation with the Uttar Pradesh forest department to source the trees.

Krishna, say his devotees, performed leelas, or magic, in these forests. Those experiences will be recreated. For example, the story goes that a demon called Aghasura came in the form of a gigantic python to kill Krishna. He opened his mouth and sat in wait. Mistaking his open mouth for a cave, Krishna and his friends decided to explore it. Once inside, Krishna saw his friends fainting because of the obnoxious smell coming from the guts of the snake.

He tore through the snake and released his friends. ISKCON wants to create a tunnel shaped like a python winding around a hillock. A water slide will take people through the snake’s cave-like mouth and out at a point where a large statue of Krishna is seen tearing open the snake’s body. The boat will take people past lakes of ‘gastric juice’ and remnants of other things the snake has ingested.

Model of the planned at Vrindavan

Now if people are going to be visiting a site as expansive as this, housing will be critical, more so as the temple is a bit removed from the city. So it plans to build simple, inexpensive rooms,ashrams, cottages and bungalows. The bungalows will be put up for sale.

It’s hard to believe it when ISKCON members tell you that the estimated cost of this ambitious project is merely Rs 350 crore. “It’s all about intelligent design and creative engineering,” says Chanchalapathi. “This shikhar (skyscraper) that is contributing to the height is like the Eiffel Tower. It is a steel structure with an external façade. We have to spend some money on the façade, but internally it’s just steel.” He says while a skyscraper costs about Rs 75 lakh per square feet, “we are doing this at about Rs 11 lakh per square feet”.

Meanwhile, the civil engineering department of the Indian Institute of Technology-Delhi is reviewing the structural design. The wind tunnel test has also been conducted to see how the structure will hold out against storms. For water, which will be critical to create and sustain the forests, ISKCON has bought two plots of land on the banks of the Yamuna, about 3 km from the temple site, and installed pumps. Pipes from there will bring water to the site.

As of now, standing on the barren stretch, it’s difficult to imagine the picture ISKCON is painting.

SOURCE::: Veenu Sandhu in http://www.business-standard.com
Natarajan

Message For the Day…” Everyone Must Preserve to Protect The Practice of Truth…”

A real student is one who contemplates and understands the value of the education being received. Higher knowledge (Vijnana) and Supreme wisdom (Prajnana) are not merely products of education that can be acquired by learning or listening. Everyone can develop these sacred powers through culture and refinement gained through education and consistent practice. What is culture? Culture is the conscious effort put in by every being to achieve a transformation in their daily lives from untruth to truth, from non-conformance to scriptures to conformance to scriptural authority, and from evanescence to eternity. It is a spiritual journey towards Divinity. Human beings are embodiments of truth. Everyone must persevere to protect the practice of Truth (Sathya) and Righteousness (Dharma), which in turn will protect the Universe. If you succeed in doing so, the whole world will enjoy peace and prosperity.

Sathya Sai Baba

” Google’s Internet Balloons Have already Traveled 3 Million Kilometers…” !!!

Google‘s Internet balloons, part of an ambitious experiment called Project Loon to bring web connectivity to remote areas, have cumulatively traveled 3 million kilometers since 2013, the company said Thursday.

Since announcing the project last July, the search giant‘s experimental wing, Google X, has refined the manufacturing process so balloons last 10 times longer—so far, a record of 130 days—in the stratosphere compared with balloons from last year. Furthermore, with automated processes, Google can now launch up to 20 balloons a day. The company is also using computer trajectory simulations to maneuver balloons accurately to their targets.

Google’s made big progress on Project Loon, but it’s not the only company aiming to blanket the world with Internet access. Facebook is also building an army of drones, airplanes, and satellites to bring the web to remote areas lacking Internet infrastructure.

For now, though, take a moment and think about what it means to travel 3 million kilometers:

“That distance would take you around the earth 75 times, or get you to the moon and back nearly 4 times over,” according to Google.

[Screenshot: via Project Loon]

SOURCE::::www.fastcompany.com

Natarajan