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From Moorish monuments and Roman ruins to Gothic gargoyles and modern marvels, these cities have glorious design masterpieces.

Interior of the Great Mosque (La Mezquita), 颁贸谤诲辞产补, 础苍诲补濒耻肠铆补, Spain
The columned interior of the Great Mosque of 颁贸谤诲辞产补 dazzles every visitor 漏 Matteo Colombo / Getty Images

1. 颁贸谤诲辞产补, Spain

Ask people to rattle off 础苍诲补濒耻肠铆补鈥檚 architectural knockouts and Granada and Seville invariably make the grade. Less hyped but just as Moorish is 颁贸谤诲辞产补. You鈥檒l never forget the moment you first lay eyes on the 8th-century Mezquita (Great Mosque). Passing the fountain-splashed, orange-tree-shaded Patio de los Naranjos courtyard, once the site of ritual ablutions before prayer. The minaret rising up to offer sweeping city views. Then the main event: the astonishing maksura, with its skylit domes, star-patterned stone vaulting and arches forming a forest of interwoven horseshoe shapes. Pinging you back to an age when 颁贸谤诲辞产补 was capital of the Muslim kingdom of Al-Andalus, this is one of Europe鈥檚 most brilliant Islamic jewels.

But since 颁贸谤诲辞产补 has , the Mezquita is just the tip of the cultural iceberg. The city鈥檚 real magic unfolds when you slip away from the crowds and dive into the medieval centre鈥檚 maze of cobbled lanes, strolling past wrought-iron balconies, potted plants, flower-draped patios, hidden plazas and ornate buildings of golden stone. Other Moorish beauties include the remains of the Medina Azahara, a lavish palace-city built by Caliph Abd ar-Rahman III in the 10th century for his favourite wife, Az-Zahra. Brimming with fish ponds, fountains, orange trees and flowers, the terraced gardens of fort-turned-palace Alc谩zar de los Reyes Cristianos are also a delight to stroll.

The famous Royal Crescent at Bath, a sweep of Georgian buildings facing a well-tended green.
The gracious Georgian buildings of Bath let you revel in England鈥檚 history and beauty 漏 gowithstock / Shutterstock

2. Bath, UK

The pomp and ceremony of high society and the grace of Georgian architecture mix and mingle in Bath, a refined vision of limestone along the banks of the River Avon in Somerset, England. This easy-on-the-eye city whisks you back to the 1800s in streets that look ripe for a bodice-ripping period drama. Indeed, many scenes in TV romance Bridgerton were filmed here, while novelist Jane Austen called the spa town home from 1801 to 1806.

Parade around the show-stopping Royal Crescent, a grand semicircle of magnificent houses overlooking Royal Victoria Park, designed by John Wood the Younger (1728鈥82), then pop into No 1 for an insight into the razzle-dazzle of Georgian life. Inspired by Rome鈥檚 Colosseum, The Circus is another of Wood鈥檚 unmissable masterpieces. Famous past residents include Thomas Gainsborough, Clive of India, David Livingstone鈥nd the actor Nicholas Cage.

Bubbles drew fashionable folk to Bath in the first place. Attracted by its 46掳C (115掳F) hot springs, the Romans first arrived in the place some 2000 years ago, and built a spectacular bathhouse dedicated to the healing goddess Sulis-Minerva. Rewind time at the Roman Baths, one of the world鈥檚 best-preserved ancient Roman spas.

Passers-by are silhouetted as they walk along the banks of the River Rhine next to the Roche Towers, Basel, Switzerland
Herzog & de Meuron鈥檚 Roche Towers embody Basel鈥檚 embrace of statement-making new buildings 漏 Gabriel Monnet / AFP via Getty Images

3. Basel, Switzerland

Other Swiss cities bowl you over with postcard-perfect Alpine backdrops and quaintly cobbled streets. Not Basel. Sitting astride the Rhine and nudging the German and French borders, this dynamic, finger-on-the-pulse city in northern Switzerland is making big waves in uncharted waters when it comes to avant-garde art and architecture. A flurry of buildings bear the imprint of Pritzker Prize鈥搘inning architects, while the cultural-juggernaut art fair takes place each June.

Devise your own self-guided tour of the architectural heavy hitters. Eye-catching works by Swiss starchitect Mario Botta include the curvy, 69.5m-high (228ft), iconically 1970s BIS Tower, and the rose-pink sandstone Museum Jean Tinguely (1996), with its long, sloping, Rhine-facing gallery. Home-grown darlings Herzog & de Meuron have left their idiosyncratic stamp on buildings such as the monolithic, copper-clad Zentralstellwerk SBB (1999), the strikingly silver-scaled (2011) and the jagged, skyscraping, energy-efficient Roche Towers (2015).

More, you say? Check out Fondation Beyeler, a long, low, light-filled, open-plan building designed by Italian architect Renzo Piano, and the Vitra Design Museum at the Vitra Campus, Frank Gehry鈥檚 swirling, deconstructivist wonder in white plaster and titanium-zinc alloy, presenting works by Frank Gehry, Zaha Hadid, 脕lvaro Siza and Tadao Ando and others. Two-hour spotlight the backgrounds of architects and buildings.

The Cathedral Maria Santissima Assunta and Saint Orontius, Lecce, Salerno, Puglia, Italy
Lecce is a cult favorite among those who love baroque architecture 漏 marcobrivio.photography / Shutterstock

4. Lecce, Italy

Florence gets all the fuss, but as anyone who loves Italian architecture will tell you (sotto voce), Lecce in Puglia is every bit as fabulous, with its riotous ensemble of baroque buildings bearing the hallmark of 17th-century homegrown masters like Francesco Antonio Zimbalo and his grandson Giuseppe Zimbalo.

In the high heel of Italy鈥檚 boot, Lecce has an architectural style so distinctive it gets its own name: barocco leccese (Lecce baroque), an exuberant expression of the genre. Balconies, loggias, porticoes, cornices and fa莽ades hewn from local honey-hued limestone come lavishly embellished with gargoyles, asparagus columns, flowers, garlands and cavorting gremlins. In the 18th-century, Irish revolutionary and traveller Thomas Ashe raved about Lecce being 鈥渢he most beautiful city in Italy鈥 鈥 and it鈥檚 certainly right up there.

The crowning glory is the Basilica di Santa Croce, its fantastical fa莽ade swirling with allegorical beasts and plump cherubs. (Less than impressed, one Marchese Grimaldi said it made him think a lunatic was having a nightmare.) You鈥檒l get another full-on whack of baroque at the Piazza del Duomo, framed by the ornate baroque cathedral, its bell tower and the episcopal palace. But don鈥檛 be fooled: Lecce is older than it looks. Below the ground level of the piazza is a 2nd-century-CE Roman amphitheater.

Aerial view of a residential area near the sea, with Turning Torso tower, 惭补濒尘枚, Sweden
Santiago Calatrava鈥檚 Turning Torso tower is a landmark of 惭补濒尘枚鈥檚 skyline 漏 Kentaroo Tryman / Getty Images

5. Copenhagen, Denmark and 惭补濒尘枚, Sweden

UNESCO World Capital of Architecture from 2023 to 2025 and hotbed of Scandi cool, Copenhagen has long been compelling for its modernist architecture, with stunners like Arne Jacobsen鈥檚 functionalist, nature-immersed Bellevue Theater, and monumental 1970s-era National Bank of Denmark. Today, the Danish capital is making new waves with a raft of ultra-progressive buildings that play up the sleekly minimalist, light-flooded, nature-inspired new-Nordic aesthetic. For an immersive experience, or hook onto guided walking tours to dash past the most eye-catching creations. These begin at the Dansk Arkitektur Center, lodged in the harborside BLOX building, a glass marvel by Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas.

For a glimpse of a greener, cleaner architectural future, take a quick metro ride to Copenhagen鈥檚 neighborhood on the island of Amager, where the city merges into nature reserve. Architects have unleashed their full rule-bending, eco-conscious genius here, with the likes of , a row of townhouses built from waste materials destined for landfill; Danish architectural firm BIG鈥檚 8 House, with its sloping green roofs; and the great golden, wooden fin-clad sweep of the .

For more Nordic brilliance, cross the landmark 脰resund Bridge (familiar to fans of the Scandi-noir crime drama series The Bridge) to 惭补濒尘枚 in Sweden. The huge architectural draw here is Turning Torso, a futuristic, 57-story high skyscraper that twists a full 90 degrees from bottom to top. Designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava and completed in 2005, it鈥檚 Scandinavia鈥檚 tallest building, at 190m (623ft).

The Coimbra city skyline with the tower of the Old Cathedral of Coimbra, in the center
Portugal鈥檚 third city, Coimbra has a magically medieval vibe 漏 Alexander Spatari / Getty Images

6. Coimbra, Portugal

Lisbon and Porto are always at the top of Portugal wishlists, but if you fancy rewinding to the Middle Ages, head instead to the country鈥檚 third city, Coimbra, midway between the bigger two. Rising dramatically from the Rio Mondego, this soulful town enthralls, its steeply stacked, medina-lined historic center nodding to Moorish rule. Tread in wonder through lanes cobbled in black basalt and white limestone in the traditional cal莽ada portuguesa (Portuguese paving) style. When the lanterns flick on in the evening, the old stone walls reverberate with the strum of the guitarra and melancholic strains of fado singers.

Celts, Romans, Visigoths, Moors: each wave of settlers has left its mark. Begin your chronological romp at the Museu Nacional de Machado de Castro, eyeing the remains of the ancient Roman Forum in the maze of tunnels under the building (the cryptoporticus). The Moors conquered and fortified Coimbra in 711; the heavy-duty Arco de Almedina arch and tower they constructed still lead to the upper town. Puff up the steep stairs nicknamed Rua Quebra-Costas (鈥淏ackbreaker鈥) to emerge in the city's historic heart. Here, you鈥檒l be drawn to the Romanesque beauty of the 12th-century S茅 Velha, bankrolled by Portugal鈥檚 first king, Afonso Henriques, in 1184. Built to defend against the Moors, the crenelated exterior, with its narrow, slit-like windows, is particularly captivating on warm summer evenings when its stone seems to glow in the soft light.

The architectural treasure hunt doesn鈥檛 stop there. For a brush with Coimbra鈥檚 academic greatness, visit one of the world鈥檚 oldest universities, the UNESCO-listed Universidade de Coimbra, founded in 1290. Its showpieces are the P谩tio das Escolas, a vast courtyard surrounded by majestic 16th- to 18th-century buildings, and the lavishly baroque Biblioteca Joanina, embellished with gold and frescoes.

People on the sidewalk in front of Casa Mil脿, popularly known as La Pedrera, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
The amazing architecture of Antoni Gaud铆 truly defines Barcelona 漏 Brian Kinney / Alamy Stock Photo

7. Barcelona, Spain

All eyes are on the coast-hugging capital of Catalonia as it gears up to take the reins as UNESCO World Capital of Architecture in 2026. To trip back through the centuries, make for the tangle of narrow, cobbled lanes of Barcelona鈥檚 Barri G貌tic (Gothic Quarter), atmospherically lantern-lit by night. These dark and mysterious streets brim with history: ruins of ancient Rome in defensive walls, aqueducts and the treasures of the Museu d鈥橦ist貌ria de Barcelona, classic Catalan Gothic churches like the 14th-century Bas铆lica de Santa Maria del Pi and the richly carved, gargoyle-festooned Catedral.

Fast-forwarding in time, you鈥檒l be keen to take in Modernista (Catalan art nouveau) marvels, many of which reveal the color-charged, whimsically chimney-topped, dream-like touch of Antoni Gaud铆 (1852鈥1926). More magician than architect, this man truly shaped his beloved city. Drawing the biggest crowds is his magnum opus, La Sagrada Fam铆lia, a riot of wax-candle-like spires dripping with organic detail, set for completion 鈥 144 years after construction began 鈥 in 2026. But curvy Casa Batll贸, shimmering with 迟谤别苍肠补诲铆蝉 (smashed-up tiles) and topped by a dragon-back roof, and the undulating, whimsically chimney-topped, UNESCO-listed La Pedrera (or Casa Mil脿) are just as splendid.

Gaud铆鈥檚 genius wasn鈥檛 confined to bricks and mortar. Take a romp around hilltop Park G眉ell to see fairy-tale-like columns and great waves of mosaics that frame the Barcelona skyline and sea beyond.

A motorcyclist passes the colorful buildings of Bryggen in Bergen, Norway
Head to Bergen to feel a Viking vibe 漏 Nick Pedersen / Getty Images

8. Bergen, Norway

Nestled between mountains and shaped by the sea, Bergen in Norway鈥檚 Western Fjords ruled the waves in the Middle Ages as Norway鈥檚 capital, an important seaport and a member of the Hanseatic League. All the might of seafaring traders, merchants, ship owners and fishermen shines in the beautifully preserved timber buildings of the UNESCO World Heritage site of Bryggen. The heart of the trading empire from the 14th to the mid-16th century, this extremely photogenic old wharf runs along the eastern shore of V氓gen Harbour in long, parallel and often precariously leaning rows of gabled buildings. Each has stacked-stone or wooden foundations and reconstructed rough-plank construction.

Viking fan? You won鈥檛 want to miss the spectacularly vaulted, dark stone-walled King H氓kons Hall, a ceremonial hall built by King H氓kon H氓konsson in 1247鈥61, where you can almost smell the hog roast and hear the boisterous feasting. Housed in a rough-timber, early 18th-century building, the nearby Hanseatic Museum illuminates the stark contrast between contrast between the austere living and working conditions of merchant sailors and the cushy lifestyle of the trade partners.

Timing is everything: visit Bryggen bright and early to avoid the tour-bus and cruise-ship masses, or wander the district once the day-trippers have departed and sunset brings out the best in the district鈥檚 ochre and ox-blood-red timber fa莽ades. Zooming in on the historic center, the 1.5-hour walking tour plunges deep into the city鈥檚 fascinating architectural heritage.

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People at creative artisans market on Place de la Palud or Palud square in Lausanne Vaud Switzerland

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