360° Photo 360° Video Photogallery Price List
中文

Search Results India (273)

 

360° Photo



North Goa, India. Part II
North Goa, India. Part II
North Goa, India. Part I
North Goa, India. Part I
Southern Maldives. Part III
Southern Maldives. Part III
Southern Maldives. Part II
Southern Maldives. Part II
Southern Maldives. Part I
Southern Maldives. Part I
Taj Mahal, India. Part II
Taj Mahal, India. Part II
Delta of the Orinoco River, Venezuela
Delta of the Orinoco River, Venezuela
Agra Fort, India
Agra Fort, India
India
India
Fatehpur Sikri, Agra, India
Fatehpur Sikri, Agra, India
Jaipur, India
Jaipur, India
The Island of Mauritius
The Island of Mauritius
Delhi, India
Delhi, India
Varanasi, India
Varanasi, India
Maldives, Anantara Kihavah and Gili Lankanfushi
Maldives, Anantara Kihavah and Gili Lankanfushi
New 7 Wonders of the World
New 7 Wonders of the World
Taj Mahal, India. Part I
Taj Mahal, India. Part I
Swaminarayan Akshardham, Delhi, India
Swaminarayan Akshardham, Delhi, India
 



360° Video



Maldives. Underwater Paradise
Maldives. Underwater Paradise
Taj Mahal, the Perl of India
Taj Mahal, the Perl of India
Taj Mahal, India
Taj Mahal, India
Warao Indians. Delta of the Orinoco River, Venezuela
Warao Indians. Delta of the Orinoco River, Venezuela
 



News



For the first time in the past 15 years, the Taj Mahal has been shot from the air by the AirPano crew!

The Taj Mahal holds one of the most important places in the list of "The New 7 Wonders of the World". 

Despite its Muslim origin, this white marble Necropolis has actually become a symbol of India. Serious safety measures are taken in order to preserve it. The 500 meters area around the complex is equipped to serve as a special protection zone.

Cars have to park 2 kilometers away from the entrance so the tourists can get there with rickshaws, carts or electric vehicles, as it is believed that the exhaust gases can make the marble cladding go yellow. Even on the other side of the river Yamuna, on the banks of which it is located, the area is protected with a barbed wire fence.

Security guards' numbers are in their hundreds.

In 1997, the famous Frenchman Bertrand took a picture of the Taj Mahal from a helicopter. For 15 years after that there was no permission granted to shoot the monument from above. But AirPano has managed to achieve the impossible: we have received this permission, and at this moment our photographers Dmitry Moiseenko and Stanislav Sedov are on their way back to Moscow with the footage. A virtual tour of the photo-shoot will appear on the website in May.

 



Photogallery