World's most amazing unfinished landmarks
Wonderful works in progress

Crazy Horse Memorial, South Dakota, USA

Not far from the world-famous presidential faces of Mount Rushmore, another enormous effigy looks out from the Black Hills. This is the face of Crazy Horse, an indigenous Lakota warrior known for his pivotal role as a leader during the Great Sioux War of 1876-77. The colossal mountain carving was the vision of Chief Henry Standing Bear, a Lakota chief and the cousin of Crazy Horse, who wanted to immortalise his late, great relative in the sacred Black Hills. He enlisted the help of sculptor Korczak Ziolkowski, pictured here with the tree-trunk-carved model he used for the project.
Crazy Horse Memorial, South Dakota, USA

The first blast of Thunderhead Mountain, where the statue is located, happened in 1948. Korczak had decided that the tribute should take over the whole mountain meaning that, upon its completion, it would stand at a whopping 563 feet (172m). Work continued steadily through the 20th century (persisting after Korczak’s sudden death in 1982) and 50 years after the initial blast, in 1998, Crazy Horse’s face was completed. The sheer enormity of the task means there’s still much to be done.
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Hassan Tower, Rabat, Morocco

Hassan Tower, Rabat, Morocco

National Monument, Edinburgh, Scotland

National Monument, Edinburgh, Scotland

However, the project planners failed to collect enough money to complete the monument and tools were downed by 1829. When work finished, only 12 columns – the 12 still standing sentry on Calton Hill – had been erected. Over the decades, many ideas for how to use and/or complete the monument have been floated, but so far nothing has stuck. This little slice of Greece remains today.
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Ryugyong Hotel, Pyongyang, North Korea

Ryugyong Hotel, Pyongyang, North Korea

Early engineering problems slowed initial progress, then North Korea was plunged into a period of economic crisis after the Soviet Union's collapse. Construction was halted in 1992 and it stood a mere shadow of its blueprint – a hollow shell without windows or any interior fixtures. Work wouldn’t resume until 2008 when Egyptian firm Orascom restarted construction. Today it’s clad in glass and illuminated with LED lights, but remains closed.
Cathedral of St. John the Divine, New York City, USA

Cathedral of St. John the Divine, New York City, USA

The Second World War halted construction and work wasn’t resumed until the 1970s. In the 1990s, a lack of funds put a stop to plans to complete the lofty south tower, then a fire in the early 2000s damaged other parts of the church too. After this, post-fire restorations were completed and other construction work was carried out in fits and starts. Today it remains unfinished, with features from the original design including towers yet to be completed. Even so, it’s still the largest cathedral in the United States and a designated New York City Landmark.
Mingun Pahtodawgyi, Mingun, Myanmar

Mingun Pahtodawgyi, Mingun, Myanmar

It’s widely believed that the king’s superstition stopped the stupa’s construction in its tracks. During building work, it was prophesied that, upon the completion of the monument, the king would die – wary King Bodawpaya is thought to have decelerated progress as a result. When he did eventually die, the project was halted altogether and it was ultimately left to ruin. The mighty crack that can be seen today was the result of a 19th-century earthquake.
Casa Loma, Toronto, Canada

Casa Loma, Toronto, Canada

Great Sphinx of Giza, Egypt

Great Sphinx of Giza, Egypt

In the 1970s, archaeologists found several items at the Sphinx site that suggest builders of the ancient monument left before it was completed. These included abandoned stone blocks and the remnants of what’s thought to be a worker’s lunch and stone hammers. There were also partially quarried swathes of bedrock, giving the impression that labourers simply downed tools and left before the job was done. Still, the monument they left behind looks pretty impressive to us.
Westminster Cathedral, London, England

Not to be confused with Westminster Abbey, Westminster Cathedral is a vast Roman Catholic church with a striking striped-brick facade and an interior decorated with mosaics. From the outside, you’d never know that this sacred building in London isn’t finished. But, inside, there are portions of the cathedral’s famed mosaics that aren’t quite complete.
Westminster Cathedral, London, England, UK

The interior mosaics were envisioned by the cathedral’s architect, John Francis Bentley, an ecclesiastical specialist who began constructing the landmark in 1895. However, he died in 1902, before its completion, leaving behind no finished mosaic works in the cathedral, and just a smattering of pencil sketches and written intentions. The job fell to other architects and designers, and work to finish the masterpiece continued throughout the century to this day.
Ta Keo, Siem Reap, Cambodia

Ta Keo, Siem Reap, Cambodia

Ajuda National Palace, Lisbon, Portugal

Ajuda National Palace, Lisbon, Portugal

Boldt Castle, Alexandria Bay, New York, USA

Boldt Castle, Alexandria Bay, New York, USA

The castle remained abandoned and battered by the elements for decades, until it was eventually overtaken by the Thousand Islands Bridge Authority in the 1970s. Today the castle’s exterior gives little clue that the building isn’t quite complete, but inside visitors can usually still see the unfinished rooms. This photo shows a snapshot of the unfinished third floor – work on the basement was never wrapped up either.
Bara Kaman, Vijayapura, India

The striking arches of Bara Kaman spread out in the north of Karnataka state in southwest India, and form part of the mausoleum built for ruler Ali Adil Shah II in the 17th century. The king was just a teenager when he ascended to the throne and he had his heart set on a mausoleum that would outshine all others. However, his dream was never fully realised. This archive snap shows the landmark as it was in the 1870s.
Bara Kaman, Vijayapura, India

Neuschwanstein Castle, Bavaria, Germany

The ultimate in Disney-esque European castles, Neuschwanstein sits high in the hills of Germany’s leafy Bavaria region. It was the vision of King Ludwig II, a 19th-century ruler who was inspired by medieval fortresses. All turrets and towers, it was – and remains – a grandiose feat of engineering, but one that King Ludwig would sadly never see completed.
Neuschwanstein Castle, Bavaria, Germany

The king moved in before his beloved castle was even completed, but was only able to enjoy it for 172 days. He died in 1886, leaving behind his incomplete fortress. After his death, many of the king’s elaborate plans for the castle were abandoned but several areas were quickly finished in order to welcome the paying public. Even today many of the rooms remain unfinished and off limits to visitors.
Sagrada Familia, Barcelona, Spain

Sagrada Familia, Barcelona, Spain

Gaudí took the reins in 1883, breathing ambitious new life into Villar’s plans. Then, from 1914, the great architect worked exclusively on the cathedral, overseeing the building of a lofty bell tower and the crypt among other features. However, progress dwindled after Gaudí’s death in 1926. Parts of the basilica were damaged during the Spanish Civil War and local opponents of the building slowed momentum even more. Today, the project still crawls towards completion, but its unfinished state doesn’t deter the millions of visitors who typically descend each year.
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