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The Palais des Nations, with its dignified architectural community and unique historical status, has become a must-check-in landscape in Geneva, Switzerland. The League of Nations was established in Geneva in 1920 after the First World War. It hosted the construction of the Palais des Nations in 1931-1938, as the headquarters of the League of Nations, also known as the League of Nations Building. After World War II, the Palais was owned by the United Nations in 1946, and then the location of the United Nations Office at Geneva, also known as the United Nations European headquarters. Visiting the Palais des Nations, two striking highlights are significant. The flag is fluttering. On the south side of the Palais des Nations, four rows of flag poles are divided in two and two, brushing from the gate to the building; the flags of more than 190 United Nations member states are suspended high, fluttering in the wind... The world is in harmony, festive and peaceful. Broken chairs are broken. The Palais des Nations, the sculpture "broken leg bench" stands, but wakes up to the world never forget the disaster brought by the mines in the war to innocent people. The back of the 12-meter-high chair is directly inserted into the sky; the legs of the three missing chairs are strung up...war trauma, humiliation and sorrow. The flag and the broken chair seemed to meditate: War and peace, the two drivers of human history, when will the development of pluralistic peace and globalization be ushered in?
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The Palais des Nations, with its dignified architectural community and unique historical status, has become a must-check-in landscape in Geneva, Switzerland. The League of Nations was established in Geneva in 1920 after the First World War. It hosted the construction of the Palais des Nations in 1931-1938, as the headquarters of the League of Nations, also known as the League of Nations Building. After World War II, the Palais was owned by the United Nations in 1946, and then the location of the United Nations Office at Geneva, also known as the United Nations European headquarters. Visiting the Palais des Nations, two striking highlights are significant. The flag is fluttering. On the south side of the Palais des Nations, four rows of flag poles are divided in two and two, brushing from the gate to the building; the flags of more than 190 United Nations member states are suspended high, fluttering in the wind... The world is in harmony, festive and peaceful. Broken chairs are broken. The Palais des Nations, the sculpture "broken leg bench" stands, but wakes up to the world never forget the disaster brought by the mines in the war to innocent people. The back of the 12-meter-high chair is directly inserted into the sky; the legs of the three missing chairs are strung up...war trauma, humiliation and sorrow. The flag and the broken chair seemed to meditate: War and peace, the two drivers of human history, when will the development of pluralistic peace and globalization be ushered in?
The Alps are far away. Surrounded by green trees, the environment is beautiful. The Palais des Nations, also known as the League of Nations, is the headquarters of the predecessor of the United Nations, and is now the United Nations Office at Geneva.
The Palais des Nations, once the headquarters of the League of Nations, now the United Nations Office at Geneva. The flagpole on the large lawn is a symbol of peace and development that is in sight; the giant sculpture of the disabled chairs on the square proclaims that war and terror should go away~
The Palais des Nations was built in 1929, set as the headquarters of the League of Nations in 1938, and became the European headquarters of the United Nations since the 1950s. The Palais des Nations was in the Ariana Park bequeathed to the city of Geneva by the Revilliod de Rive family, and the gift was made on the condition that some peacocks be free to move in the park, which today becomes a landscape there. Visiting the Palais des Nations requires a tour and passport or other identity documents. Except for English and French tours, reservations are required in advance for other languages, and the visit is 1 hour.
零一九年的时候,曾去过万国宫门口那里看了万国的旗帜飘扬的人真的心里澎湃,而且门口的那个代表和平的三角凳让人印象深刻去了,瑞王一定要去问过龚门口好好照照相留个言
换个工非常宏伟状况,在门口看的话都是非常不错,虽然可能跟中国的其他地方,他们比起来还是有着不同,有点生疏,在门口的各种的旗子,在里面一个地标性的你歌曲腿的椅子代表的世界的和平,真的非常值得看也要去逛逛。
It’s a pity that the United Nations Headquarters in the brawl has no way to enter. You can see the flag. You can leave after punching in quickly. 😌😌😌