
De bezienswaardigheden in elke reisgids – en de tours die je vertellen wat reisgidsen weglaten.
Dhaka is a city that never seems to stop. Nearly 14 million people in the city proper move through streets so dense with cycle-rickshaws, CNGs, and pedestrians that traffic doesn't so much flow as negotiate. It has been like this for a long time: under the Mughals in the 17th century, Dhaka served as the capital of Bengal Subah and was famous across the trading world for its weavers, who produced a silk-cotton muslin so fine it was called 'woven air' -- a cloth so light that legend held a sari of it could be threaded through a finger ring.
Old Dhaka, south of the modern city, holds the traces of that history.
The Lalbagh Fort, begun in 1678 by Prince Muhammad Azam, sits incomplete by deliberate choice: construction was abandoned after his fiancee died within its walls and it was considered ill-omened to continue. The Ahsan Manzil, the Pink Palace built in 1872 on the bank of the Buriganga River, is one of the most photogenic buildings in the country, now a museum. The streets of Old Dhaka run through the cutlery market, the flower district, and the sweetmeat sellers, while the cycle-rickshaw painters who decorate vehicle hoods treat their craft with the same seriousness as any gallery artist.

Before you walk.
Alle 50+ talen, inbegrepen bij elke boeking.
Ontgrendel alle Dhaka-tours – plus duizenden meer wereldwijd. Op elk moment opzeggen.

4.8 in de App Store en Google Play. Hier zijn er een paar die we blijven teruglezen.
Deze tour was een geweldige manier om de stad te zien. De verhalen waren interessant zonder te gekunsteld aan te voelen, en ik vond het heerlijk om op mijn eigen tempo te verkennen.
Dit was een prima manier om Brighton te leren kennen zonder je als toerist te voelen. De vertelling had diepgang en context, maar overdreef het niet.
Begon deze tour met een croissant in de ene hand en nul verwachtingen. De app gaat gewoon mee met je, geen druk, gewoon jij, je koptelefoon en gave verhalen.