The Taj Mahal is India's most popular monument and a New Wonder of the World. In 2008, a Bangladeshi filmmaker had a replica created in Dhaka with hopes of making a version of the famed landmark that everyone could see. In addition to this one, there are six other Taj Mahal clones around the world!
Visitors to Odaiba, Japan can check out a version of the Statue of Liberty that is just 1/7th the size of the real deal. Built in 1998, the fake was only supposed to be erected temporarily in honor of the relationship between Japan and France. However, it was such a hit they decided to let it remain.
The famous half-lion, half-fish symbol of Singapore not only appears in statue form there. Medan, Indonesia has its own version. But not only has the town recreated the merlion statue; it has replicated many of Singapore's landmarks, including the Fountain of Wealth and the Fullerton Hotel arches.
While the original Parthenon is in Athens, Greece, you can find a replica of it in Nashville, Tennessee's Centennial Park. The full-scale copycat, which was designed by architect William Crawford Smith, came to be in 1897.
Another New Wonder of the World and icon of Brazil is its famed Christ the Redeemer statue. Lisbon's Cardinal Patriarch, Manuel Gonçalves Cerejeira, saw it when visiting Rio de Janeiro and loved the statue so much that he had one created in Almada, Portugal.
Another New Wonder of the World and icon of Brazil is its famed Christ the Redeemer statue. Lisbon's Cardinal Patriarch, Manuel Gonçalves Cerejeira, saw it when visiting Rio de Janeiro and loved the statue so much that he had one created in Almada, Portugal.
With so many copies around the globe, the Eiffel Tower is the world's most duplicated landmark. Replicas of the famous tower can be found in countries like Japan, Australia, Pakistan, Greece, Panama, Germany, Czech Republic, Morocco, Denmark, Israel, and the United States.