Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Computing
  4. Mobile
  5. Web
  6. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Walk the Great Wall of China in Google’s latest virtual tour

Add as a preferred source on Google

If your pandemic-related precautions still prevent you from traveling but you’d like to take a trip somewhere far away, then how about diving into the latest virtual tour from Google Arts & Culture?

 

The Street View-style experience features a 360-degree virtual tour of one of the best-preserved sections of the Great Wall, which in its entirety stretches for more than 13,000 miles — about the round-trip distance between Los Angeles and New Zealand.

The Great Wall of China.
A section of China’s Great Wall. Google Arts & Culture

The new virtual tour includes 370 high-quality images of the Great Wall, together with 35 stories offering an array of architectural details about the world-famous structure.

Recommended Videos

“It’s a chance for people to experience parts of the Great Wall that might otherwise be hard to access, learn more about its rich history, and understand how it’s being preserved for future generations,” Google’s Pierre Caessa wrote in a blog post announcing the new content.

The wall was used to defend against various invaders through the ages and took more than 2,000 years to build. The structure is often described as “the largest man-made project in the world.”

But climate conditions and human activities have seen a third of the UNESCO World Heritage site gradually crumble away, though many sections of the wall are now being restored so that it can be enjoyed and appreciated for years to come.

Google Arts & Culture has been steadily adding to its library of virtual tours, which can be enjoyed on mobile and desktop devices. The collection includes The Hidden Worlds of the National Parks and an immersive exploration of some of the world’s most remote and historically significant places.

If you’re looking for more content along the same lines, then check out these virtual-tour apps that transport you to special locations around the world, and even to outer space.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Nothing’s latest teaser suggests its budget lineup isn’t dead, it’s just rebranding
Nothing scrapped a planned CMF phone over rising costs, but a new teaser points to the same idea returning under its main brand.
Nothing Phone 4a Pro featured.

Shortly after confirming plans to shelve its next CMF phone, Nothing has dropped a teaser pointing to a likely replacement under the main brand. A new clip shared on X doesn't name the upcoming device explicitly, but a detail near the end suggests it may be called the Nothing Phone 4b.

A familiar design hints at the lineup it belongs to

Read more
Vivo X300 Ultra Review: So close to perfection it hurts
We think this might be the best Android phone right now.
Vivo X300 Ultra

Quick Review

The Vivo X300 Ultra is one of those rare flagship smartphones that feels purpose-built rather than designed to tick specification boxes. After spending weeks with the device, my biggest takeaway is that Vivo has refined nearly every aspect of an already excellent formula.

Read more
HMD’s next phone has leaked, and I’m tired of seeing the same iPhone-copycat design again and again
The specs are fine. The design brief was apparently "look at Apple's homework and get creative."
HMD Smartphone

Every few months, a new budget Android phone shows up with a design that’s either heavily inspired by the latest iPhone or a straightforward copy. 

Leaked renders of the HMD Luma 2, shared by tipster @smashx_60 on X, seem to be blurring the line between the two. 

Read more