On this day 197 years ago the world's first ever public railway was opened in northern England.
And a whole new form of architecture was born: the train station.
So, to celebrate, here are some of the world's greatest train stations...
The best place to start is with the world's oldest surviving grand terminus — Liverpool Lime Street in England, opened in 1836.
The station hotel, pictured here, was built in 1871 like a French château in the Second Empire style.
It became clear, as rail travel exploded in popularity, that every city would need a central station.
They had to function as transport hubs first of all; but they were also important civic structures.
It was the first place visitors would see, so why not make it beautiful?
And so train stations — for which there was plenty of funding, given that rail was then a cutting-edge, world-changing technology — became an opportunity for grand architectural projects.
Antwerp Station in Belgium (1905) is almost impossibly lavish.
Then there's something like Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus in Mumbai.
It was built in 1888 and combines Indian, Islamic, and Victorian Neo-Gothic architecture into one extraordinary — and totally unique — building.
There were critics who argued that this was an abuse of architecture, and that it was wrong to use such beautiful and historical styles for buildings which were essentially industrial.
Something like Genova Brignole station, built in 1905, looks like a palace.
Was there any value to this criticism? Perhaps, but it didn't stop the projects coming thick and fast — and many people today are grateful for it.
Whether Gare du Nord in Paris, Milano Centrale, Wrocław Główny, or Desamparados Station in Lima, wonderful stations kept appearing.
Soon hotels were integrated into stations, too, and this offered a further chance for architectural grandeur.
At St Pancras Station in London the Midland Grand Hotel, designed by George Gilbert Scott in 1873, was the zenith of Victorian neo-Gothic exuberance:
But train stations aren't only about domes, colonnades, and ornament; they also represent some of the world's great industrial architecture.
Along with its hotel St Pancras has a colossal train shed which is 200m long, 75m wide, and 30m tall.
Architecture & engineering united.
It would also be wrong not to mention underground train stations. The very first was Baker Street in London, built in 1863 and still going strong.
Since then metro stations have become home to some of the most beautiful, inventive, and peculiar architecture in the world:
Of course, not all great train stations have survived.
The old Penn Station in New York is the most famous casualty of what now seem like short-sighted decisions in the 20th century.
A leviathan of American Beaux-Arts built in 1910 and destroyed in 1963.
But the USA has lost far more than just Penn Station.
All of the stations in this image have been demolished, sometimes with good reason, but surely these buildings — even if obsolete — could have been preserved and given a new purpose.
Even as trains have been challenged by automobiles, the importance of urban rail transportation remains intact.
New stations, like their precursors in the 19th century, are still grand projects of major civic significance.
Beijing West, built in 1996, is unmissable.
And "celebrity architects" are often recruited for these grand projects, like Zaha Hadid's Napoli-Afragola Station.
The style may have changed — no more 19th century revivalist architecture — but the idea that stations are a chance to make a statement has gone nowhere.
And stations, by virtue of being in constant use, are always undergoing restoration and expansion.
Kanazawa Station in Japan opened in 1898, but its architecture has evolved a great deal since then.
The list goes on, from Maputo Central and Soarano Station to São Paulo's Luz Station and Madrid Atocha.
Train stations represent the perfect union of architecture, engineering, and public interest; there's surely a great deal we could learn today from this rich, global heritage.
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This looks European, but it's actually a Chinese hotel inspired by Neuschwanstein Castle.
China also has its own versions of Paris, Venice, and London.
Some call them "fake", but 80% of the world has never been on a plane. Why shouldn't architecture do the travelling instead?
Neuschwanstein itself isn't even a real Medieval castle. It was built in the 19th century by King Ludwig of Bavaria, who loved the operas of Richard Wagner and created a Medieval fantasy palace in his honour.
So the "original" Neuschwanstein Castle is also "fake".
The Chinese Neuschwanstein is Jilong Castle Country Club.
It was built a decade ago on a small island in Wanfeng Lake, Guizhou Province, where it is powered by its own hydroelectric power plant.
Today is the equinox — day & night are equal and a new season has arrived. So here are some of the best (and most surprising) paintings of autumn...
1. Allegory of Autumn by Giuseppe Arcimboldo (1573)
2. Farmhouse in Autumn in Ayashi, Miyagi by Hasui (1946)
A simple but beautiful evocation of autumn all about its careful distribution of colour and light. It is by the last master of ukiyo-e, Kawase Hasui, who mixed traditional Japanese methods with those of western artists.
3. Autumn by Frederic Edwin Church (1873)
Church was perhaps the greatest of the Hudson River School, a group of 19th century artists dedicated to painting the beauty, scale, and variety of the American landscape.
You can sense his awe and deep affection for nature.
A brief introduction to Neoclassical Architecture...
The story begins over two thousand years ago with the architecture of Greece and, later, Rome.
Proportion, rounded arches, porticos, tympanums, the five orders (Doric, Ionic, Corinthian, Etruscan, Composite) — this was the original Classical Architecture.
But the Roman Empire fell, the Middle Ages arrived, and Classical Architecture faded away.
In its place Gothic Architecture slowly but surely emerged, a style fundamentally at odds with that of Greece and Rome.
People talk about Picasso and Dalí, but here's a name you probably haven't heard: Hasui Kawase, the last master of Japanese ukiyo-e.
It sounds oddly specific, but no other artist in history was so good at depicting the weather...
There's a world in which Hasui Kawase never existed.
He was born as Bunjiro Kawase in 1883 and though art was his passion, Bunjiro was supposed to take over his father's business.
Until his sister and her husband eventually took over instead...
So Bunjiro was free to study painting, first under the Western-style artist Okada Saburosuke and then the traditional Japanese-style artist Kaburagi Kiyokata.
And it was Kiyokata who, according to custom, gave the young man his own artist's name — Hasui.
14 of the most beautiful windows in the world, from around the globe and across the centuries:
1. Maison Saint-Cyr, Brussels, Belgium
Art Nouveau was invented in Belgium — and the Maison Saint-Cyr, designed by Gustave Strauven in 1901, might just have the world's single finest Art Nouveau window.
An elegant shape with flowing lines, floral metalwork, and sumptuous wood.
2. Nasir ol-Molk Mosque, Shiraz, Iran
Also known as the Pink Mosque and built in the 1880s, this is perhaps the crowning architectural achievement of the Qajar Dynasty.
It is a kaleidoscope of pattern and light — partly thanks to its technicolour array of stained glass windows.
Why does The Lord of the Rings trilogy still look so good?
Many reasons, but here's one: Minas Tirith wasn't CGI. They built a miniature version of the whole city and filmed that. It looks realistic... because it was real.
And this wasn't even the biggest model they made...
Peter Jackson, director of The Lord of the Rings, loves to use "miniatures".
What's a miniature? You build a model of what is impossible to build for real.
They can be digitally enhanced, but miniatures give a texture and sense of realism which CGI can't replicate on its own.
This is one of the oldest techniques in film-making, going back well over a century.
A famous example is the 1927 film Metropolis.
Using foam, wood, polysterene, and just about everything else, artists and designers use miniatures to bring fictional worlds to life.