Have you visited the UK’s underground attractions hidden from the world?

What lies beneath

<p>RGB Ventures/SuperStock/Alamy Stock Photo</p>

RGB Ventures/SuperStock/Alamy Stock Photo

From wartime tunnels and salt mines to rock-hewn temples and ancient cisterns beneath modern-day cities, if you head underground you’ll gain a whole new perspective on the world.

Read on for the most extraordinary subterranean attractions across the globe…

Adventure Mine Sauna, Dalarna, Sweden

<p>Adventure Mine</p>

Adventure Mine

The Swedes have long been known for their sauna culture, but this unlikely new attraction sees the relaxing practice brought to an unexpected location. At the Adventure Mine in Dalarna, central Sweden, you can journey into a disused mine 262 feet (80m) underground and bathe in the mine's crystal clear waters, before sweating it out in a traditional wooden sauna. It's also possible to do a 'Lady of the Mine sauna ritual' which includes elements to awaken the senses and get endorphins going.

Dinosaur Caves, Pismo Beach, California, USA

<p>Alexander Davidovich/Shutterstock</p>

Alexander Davidovich/Shutterstock

The San Luis Obispo County stretch of the Californian coast is home to a world of arches, caves, grottos and rock gardens that are only accessible from the water. Visitors can explore their watery depths on an exhilarating three-hour excursion with Central Coast Kayaks – some of the caves run up to 30 feet (9m) deep. If you’re lucky you’ll spot seals, otters and dolphins as you paddle through the North Pacific

Ajanta Caves, Aurangabad, India

<p>Yongyut/Shutterstock</p>

Yongyut/Shutterstock

A cliff face in Maharashtra hides remarkably well-preserved murals, carvings and sculptures dating from the 1st or 2nd century to the 5th century, which are considered masterpieces of Buddhist religious art. Lost until a hunting party stumbled across an entrance in 1819, the 30 or so caves have a network of halls, with columns carved out of the rock.

Raufarholshellir lava tunnel, Iceland

<p>Keldon Photography/Alamy Stock Photo</p>

Keldon Photography/Alamy Stock Photo

Just outside Reykjavík, you can walk through a 100-foot-wide (30m) tunnel formed as a lava tube in a volcanic eruption more than 5,000 years ago. In some places the roof has caved in and natural light – and snow – floods in. Elsewhere, impressive lighting highlights the colours and geological formations.

 

The Louvre, Paris, France

<p>Netfalls Remy Musser/Shutterstock</p>

Netfalls Remy Musser/Shutterstock

Originally a fortress and then a royal residence, today the Louvre holds one of the world’s finest collections of art and architect I.M. Pei’s glass pyramid has become an iconic Paris landmark. The once-controversial entrance to a huge underground lobby was initially deemed too modern by some, but today is synonymous with the French capital. There’s also a fascinating underground walkway past the medieval foundations of the Louvre.

City Market Catacombs, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA

<p>IndianaLandmarks/Facebook</p>

IndianaLandmarks/Facebook

Delve beneath the buzzing cafes of City Market in Indianapolis and you'll find an eerily quiet network of catacombs, stretching for 22,000 square feet (2,043sqm). The limestone brick arches and pillars were originally the basement of Tomlinson Hall, a vast municipal building that was demolished after a fire in 1958. After construction work is finished around the markets sometime in 2025, organised tours will resume and give you the chance to explore the musty underground warren which is popular with ghost hunters.

Colosseum, Rome, Italy

<p>Rubens Alarcon/Alamy Stock Photo</p>

Rubens Alarcon/Alamy Stock Photo

There's plenty to explore beneath the surface of the world-famous Colosseum in Rome. Go underground to visit the dungeons where gladiators and animals waited before their fight. You can also see a reconstructed trapdoor and wooden elevator used to hoist fighters to arena level.

Drach Caves, Mallorca, Spain

<p>Cristian Mircea Balate/Alamy Stock Photo</p>

Cristian Mircea Balate/Alamy Stock Photo

Visiting the stunning Drach Caves near Porto Christo in Mallorca is a truly magical experience. Visitors are ferried across a vast subterranean lake on wooden boats, through gorgeously lit caverns and under ceilings dripping with curtains of stalactite. Tours last roughly an hour and include a live classical music concert. A quartet of cellos, harpsichord and two violins have been serenading underground visitors in this most magical of venues since 1935.

Wieliczka salt mine, Krakow, Poland

<p>Beautiful landscape/Shutterstock</p>

Beautiful landscape/Shutterstock

This UNESCO salt mine in Poland has been mined since the 13th century. It's nine levels deep but only sections of the first three are open to the public – 1% of the entire mine. Chilly corridors lead to illuminated chambers with sculptures carved from salt and vast underground chapels. You can take individual or group tours.

 

De Ruien, Antwerp, Belgium

<p>De Ruien/Facebook</p>

De Ruien/Facebook

Above ground, Antwerp is a fascinating mix of medieval history and contemporary cool. This unusual tour beneath its streets explores the network of sewers, vaults and canals in semi-darkness, while revealing the secrets of Belgium’s second city through the ages. Be prepared for bad smells...

Crypt at St Paul’s Cathedral, London, England, UK

<p>RGB Ventures/SuperStock/Alamy Stock Photo</p>

RGB Ventures/SuperStock/Alamy Stock Photo

St Paul’s in London is famous for its stunning dome, but what of the cathedral sights below ground? The crypt holds the tombs of the Duke of Wellington, Lord Nelson (pictured) and cathedral architect Sir Christopher Wren, plus many other ecclesiastical gems. The crypt and treasury are vast, running the entire length of the cathedral above.

Motouleng Sacred Caves, Thabo Mofutsanyana, South Africa

<p>Fezekile Futhwa/Shutterstock</p>

Fezekile Futhwa/Shutterstock

These caves near the border of Lesotho sit beneath one of the largest rock overhangs in the southern hemisphere. Motouleng means ‘the place where the drums keep beating’ in the local Basotho language and today the caves are considered a sacred site and a popular pilgrimage destination. Sangomas (shaman healers) live in the caves and perform spiritual healings, initiation rites and baptisms for pilgrims. You’ll also find traditional dwellings, drywalls and kraals made from straw and grass.

Wind Cave National Park, South Dakota, USA

<p>Lost_in_the_Midwest/Alamy Stock Photo</p>

Lost_in_the_Midwest/Alamy Stock Photo

Wind Cave, deep below the South Dakota grasslands, is one of the world’s longest cave networks, where some of the rock formations date back 310 million years. It’s earned its name because when powerful winds blast in and out, the cave makes a whistling noise. Over 150 miles (241km) of its rocky passages have been explored and that's thought to only be 10% of the caves. The big draw is the boxwork, thin blades of calcite that project from cave walls and ceilings, creating intricate patterns.

German underground hospital, Guernsey, Channel Islands

<p>VisitGuernsey/Facebook</p>

VisitGuernsey/Facebook

Built by forced labour on the island of Guernsey during the Second World War, this military hospital doubled as a munitions store for occupying German forces. All that can be seen above ground are the small entrances and ventilation shafts, but underground there is around 75,000 square feet (6,950sqm) of tunnels you can explore.

Indiana Caverns, Corydon, Indiana, USA

<p>indianacaverns.com</p>

indianacaverns.com

Adventurers will love the four-hour Deep Darkness tour inside the lower caves at Indiana Caverns. It's physically challenging, starting with a descent down a 93-foot (28m) ladder followed by a section of scrambling over boulders and crawling through watery passages. The final part is a kayak down a subterranean river – keep your eye out for cave crayfish.

Port cellars, Porto, Portugal

<p>S-F/Shutterstock</p>

S-F/Shutterstock

Port is at the heart of Porto. Portugal’s second city is the place where the fortified wine is aged in tanks or wooden barrels and then exported. A cellar tour in Porto is a must and there are dozens of options with guided tours and tastings.

Atta Caves, Attendorn, Germany

<p>robertharding Alamy Stock Photo</p>

robertharding Alamy Stock Photo

This mesmerising dripstone cave in Sauerland was discovered back in 1907 and has been one of Germany’s most popular caves ever since. Visitors follow a 1.12-mile (1.8km) path past impressive stalagmites and stalactites that look remarkably like cheese. Interestingly, a local ‘cave cheese’ is matured here for three months, the optimal conditions enhancing its piquant flavour. You can sample it at the shop onsite and see for yourself.

Cisternerne, Copenhagen, Denmark

<p>Color Chaser/Shutterstock</p>

Color Chaser/Shutterstock

Beneath Sondermarken park in central Copenhagen lies a cathedral-sized underground reservoir that was once filled with 16 million litres of drinking water. It's now part of the Frederiksberg Museums and a venue for contemporary art exhibitions and events. This fascinating space also has naturally forming stalactites and stalagmites.

Temppeliaukio Rock Church, Helsinki, Finland

<p>Mikhail Markovskiy/Shutterstock</p>

Mikhail Markovskiy/Shutterstock

Carved out of solid rock with a copper dome roof, Temppeliaukio is a popular attraction in the centre of Helsinki, Finland. On the inside, exposed rock lines the walls and the altar is made from granite. Natural light floods in through the skylights creating a beautiful sight. It’s a serene place – when it’s not crowded with tourists. The acoustics are outstanding and concerts and recitals are held here throughout the year, and you can take a guided tour.

Onondaga Cave, Leasburg, Missouri, USA

<p>Aneta Waberska/Shutterstock</p>

Aneta Waberska/Shutterstock

Onondaga Cave is a subterranean world of spectacular stalactites and lofty stalagmites in Onondaga Cave State Park. The tours are less commercialised than some Missouri cave systems, but nonetheless fascinating. There's a flowing river and crystal-clear pool with lily pad-like calcite deposits resting gently on the surface.

 

Under, Kristiansand, Norway

<p>MIR/Snøhetta</p>

MIR/Snøhetta

There's an incredible underwater restaurant in Kristiansand in southern Norway. Designed by award-winning architects Snøhetta, Under looks like a rock formation rising from the sea. Guests descend 18 feet (5.5m) underwater to a dining room with floor-to-ceiling windows looking out on the watery depths.

Elephanta Caves, Gharapuri Island, India

<p>Daniel Doerfler/Shutterstock</p>

Daniel Doerfler/Shutterstock

The “city of caves” on Elephanta (Gharapuri) Island, six miles (10km) east of Mumbai, are famous for their UNESCO mid-6th and 7th-century rock-cut temples and sculptures. The jaw-dropping main cave is dedicated to one of the principal deities in Hinduism, Shiva, and is dominated by a 23-foot high (7m) Sadashiva sculpture.

Silver mines, Potosi, Bolivia

<p>robertharding/Alamy Stock Photo</p>

robertharding/Alamy Stock Photo

Cerro Potosi (also known as Cerro Rico, or Rich Mountain) in southern Bolivia made the Spanish Empire vastly wealthy, but cost the lives of Indigenous people and African enslaved people. There's barely any silver left in these high altitude mines and today mostly only tin is mined, and conditions for workers haven't improved. If you choose to visit (it's an eye-opening experience) then go with an ethical and responsible tour company.

Lehman Caves, Baker, Nevada, USA

<p>IrinaK/Shutterstock</p>

IrinaK/Shutterstock

In Nevada’s Great Basin National Park, the Lehman Caves is a spectacular cave system, formed from millions of years of subterranean streams dissolving the limestone rock. During the Prohibition era, it was used as a secret speakeasy, but now the attraction is the thousands of delicate columns, hollow stalactites (known as soda straws) and needle-like crystals. Join a tour and look out for 'cave popcorn', small lumps of calcite that look surprisingly like the cinema snack.

Salt cathedral, Zipaquira, Colombia

<p>Jesse Kraft/Alamy Stock Photo</p>

Jesse Kraft/Alamy Stock Photo

Not far from Colombia’s capital city of Bogota, the Zipaquira salt cathedral is around 590 feet (180m) underground in an abandoned salt mine. The underground area is beneath an original sanctuary carved out by miners – the current cathedral space only opened in 1995. It’s open to visitors all week except on some Sundays when Catholic services are held here, despite the site not being an official church.

Berber village of Matmata, Tunisia

<p>Zabotnovia Inna/Shutterstock</p>

Zabotnovia Inna/Shutterstock

The southern Tunisian Berber village of Matmata was the Star Wars filming location for Luke Skywalker's birthplace. Typical Berber 'troglodyte' homes are built by digging out a large pit (which becomes a central courtyard) and then carving outer subterranean rooms in the soft sandstone. Tourists can take an organised tour through reputable companies.

Derinkuyu underground city, Cappadocia, Turkey

<p>Pakhnyushchy/Shutterstock</p>

Pakhnyushchy/Shutterstock

An incredible multi-levelled underground city was discovered in 1963 in the region of Cappadocia, Turkey, when a local resident knocked down a wall in his basement. A honeycomb of secret passageways, churches, schools, bedrooms, bathrooms and even tombs was carved into the soft rock beneath, with rolling stone doors that only opened from the inside. Likely to have been built in case of invasion, there's enough space for 20,000 people to be able to live here.

Viet Cong tunnels, Cu Chi, Vietnam

<p>Lucas Correa Pacheco/Shutterstock</p>

Lucas Correa Pacheco/Shutterstock

This underground network of tunnels in southern Vietnam are a popular tourist attraction today, but were once the stronghold of the Viet Cong who fought against the United States and the south Vietnamese government. Two complexes northwest of Ho Chi Minh City have hundreds of miles of narrow, claustrophobic tunnels – some have been widened so today’s visitors can wriggle through on hands and knees.

Catacombs, Paris, France

<p>Ed Goodacre/Shutterstock</p>

Ed Goodacre/Shutterstock

The catacombs are a labyrinth of gloomy galleries and passageways in a disused quarry beneath the streets of Paris. Here lie the bones of millions of Parisians, moved here from overflowing city graveyards in the 18th and 19th centuries, and arranged in decorative, high Romantic-style displays.

Bund Sightseeing Tunnel, Shanghai, China

<p>Alena Charykova/Shutterstock</p>

Alena Charykova/Shutterstock

The short trip on the Bund Sightseeing Tunnel under Shanghai’s Huangpu River might cost a lot more than the metro, but the journey from The Bund to Lujiazui, close to the Pearl Tower, is an unmissable experience. Passengers on rail cars pass through a flashing strobe light show with an interesting soundtrack, and emerge five minutes later.

Ruby Falls, Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, USA

<p>BokDavid/Shutterstock</p>

BokDavid/Shutterstock

In 1928, deep inside Tennessee’s Lookout Mountain, a hidden 145-foot (44m) waterfall was discovered tumbling into a limestone cave. You can take an atmospheric after-dark lantern tour through cavern trails to see the waterfall. Listen out, you'll hear the mighty, thunderous falls before you see it.

 

Domus Aurea, Rome, Italy

<p>Andrea Izzotti/Shutterstock.com</p>

Andrea Izzotti/Shutterstock.com

Rome’s Domus Aurea (Emperor Nero’s 'Golden House') is a palace on an unbelievable scale. Now underground, frescoes are visible in excavated rooms and VR goggles allow visitors to see it as it was – a place of excess with marble walls, gold leaf decoration and dazzling jewels. The grounds of the palace covered most of ancient Rome. Domus Aurea was built (and destroyed) before the Colosseum was constructed.

Mammoth Cave, Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky, USA

<p>Kostya Zatulin/Shutterstock</p>

Kostya Zatulin/Shutterstock

Mammoth Cave in Kentucky gained its name for a reason. With over 400 miles (644km) of mapped passages, it's the longest cave system in the world. You can explore 10 miles (16km) of tunnels by guided hikes and the formations are staggering – admire Frozen Niagara, which looks just like a waterfall sculpted out of rock. The caves are also home to albino shrimps, cave fish and several endangered bat species.

The Underground City, Montreal, Canada

<p>vladG/Shutterstock</p>

vladG/Shutterstock

Above ground, winter temperatures in Montreal can plummet to -15°C (5°F) but there's something hidden below the surface. La ville souterraine (the underground city) comprises 14 miles (22.5km) of passages providing access to the Metro, ice skating rinks, major hotels, restaurants, shops and underground parking. It's decorated with chandeliers, modern art and Canada’s largest indoor water fountain.

Coober Pedy, South Australia, Australia

<p>David Wall/Alamy Stock Photo</p>

David Wall/Alamy Stock Photo

Deep in the desert of the Australian outback, Coober Pedy is a peculiar town where its 2,000 or so residents have dug down to escape the searing heat (pictured is museum Faye's Underground Home). It’s only a town in the first place due to opal mining and now tourism plays an important part. There's an underground opal museum, a hotel, a campsite and even a Serbian church.

 

Inner Space Cavern, Georgetown, Texas, USA

<p>Tricia Daniel/Shutterstock</p>

Tricia Daniel/Shutterstock

Members of the Texas Highway Department stumbled across Inner Space Cavern in 1963, when drilling through rock to test if it could support an overpass. When their drill fell through the roof of the Discovery Cave, they realised they were above a vast subterranean network. Today, you can explore the chambers, with their sharp stalagmites, still pools and even coral (this was once the ocean floor) on daily tours.

Waitomo Caves, North Island, New Zealand

<p>Shaun Jeffers/Shutterstock</p>

Shaun Jeffers/Shutterstock

Visit Waitomo Caves on New Zealand’s North Island and explore a series of sculpted tunnels with stalactites and stalagmites before a boat trip on inky Waitomo River. Inside the vast cathedral grotto, see the ghostly constellations created by thousands of glowworms.

 

Luray Caverns, Luray, Virginia, USA

<p>Joe Ravi/Shutterstock</p>

Joe Ravi/Shutterstock

Buried on the fringes of Shenandoah National Park in Virginia, Luray Caverns are on a staggering scale. The epic chambers have ceilings over 10 storeys high and crystalline pools, such as Dream Lake, which has a surface so glassy it mirrors the stalactites above. There’s also the legendary Great Stalacpipe Organ, which can play Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata by using rubber mallets to strike 37 stalactites of varying sizes.

Rock-hewn churches, Lalibela, Ethiopia

<p>witR/Shutterstock</p>

witR/Shutterstock

A place of pilgrimage in the heart of Ethiopia, Lalibela has 11 rock-hewn churches from the 13th century that are inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List. The monolithic House of Saint George (Biete Ghiorgis), in the shape of a cross, is isolated from the rest but was similarly chiselled out and connected to catacombs.

Cheddar Gorge and Caves, England, UK

<p>imageBROKER/Alamy Stock Photo</p>

imageBROKER/Alamy Stock Photo

Seek out hidden chambers, stunning stalactite caverns formed in the Ice Age and prehistoric dwellings within Britain’s biggest gorge, a 400-foot (122m) deep and three-mile (4.8km) long natural formation set within Somerset's scenic Mendip Hills. One of the most notable is Gough’s cave, where Cheddar Man was discovered in 1903 – the oldest complete skeleton ever found in Britain.

 

Nuremberg Cellars, Nuremberg, Germany

<p>dpa picture alliance/Alamy Stock Photo</p>

dpa picture alliance/Alamy Stock Photo

Underneath Nuremberg’s imposing Imperial Castle lies one of the most extraordinary sights in Germany: a labyrinth of underground cellars and passageways, carved out of sandstone, and used to brew and store beer for over 700 years. The cellars sit 65.6 feet (20m) underground, spread over several storeys and cover a combined area of 269,098 square feet (25,000sqm). Tours of the maze of cellars and corridors show where townsfolk sheltered during the Second World War and often end with a traditional Nuremberg red beer.

Cenotes, Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico

<p>Simon Dannhauer/Shutterstock</p>

Simon Dannhauer/Shutterstock

It’s estimated that there might be 6,000 cenotes in the limestone of the Yucatan Peninsula. These dazzling natural underground reservoirs can be closed, semi-open or caved in, and often have crystal-clear water perfect for swimming and diving. To the ancient Mayans, these were sacred places and it was believed that they were a portal to communicate with the gods.

Al Khazneh, Petra, Jordan

<p>Truba7113/Shutterstock</p>

Truba7113/Shutterstock

Ancient Petra in Jordan boasts the imposing temple of Al Khazneh (The Treasury), an ancient Arab tomb carved directly into a sandstone rockface. The six-column facade is famous the world over courtesy of 1989 movie Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, but the interior is a colossal inner chamber and sanctuary.

Blair Street Vaults, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK

<p>Mercat Tours/Facebook</p>

Mercat Tours/Facebook

Deep beneath Edinburgh's Old Town, the gloomy subterranean passages of Blair Street Underground vaults were only rediscovered in the 1980s. Mercat Tours has exclusive access and runs regular tours to regale spooked tourists with fascinating insights into a murky past of smugglers, murderers and body snatchers.

Homestead Crater, Midway, Utah, USA

<p>HomesteadResortUT/Facebook</p>

HomesteadResortUT/Facebook

This geothermal spring in Utah is buried within a dome-shaped limestone rock. The crater, 10,000 years in the making, formed when melting snow on the Wasatch Mountains seeped deep within the ground. The earth’s interior heated the water and as it percolated upward, it picked up minerals which were then deposited on the surface. Part of the Homestead Resort, you can swim, snorkel and scuba dive in the blue, bath-like, 35°C (95°F) water.

Thrihnukagigur volcano, Iceland

<p>Joana Kruse/Alamy Stock Photo</p>

Joana Kruse/Alamy Stock Photo

Iceland is one of the most active volcanic regions in the world but Thrihnukagigur, which translates as Three Peaks, is dormant. Last time Thrihnukagigur erupted was more than 4,000 years ago and today it's possible to go inside the volcano. Following a hike across a lava field, six to seven people at a time are lowered slowly into the empty magma chamber – a spectacular space that would easily fit the Statue of Liberty.

Greenbrier Bunker, White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, USA

<p>The Greenbrier/Facebook</p>

The Greenbrier/Facebook

The Greenbrier bunker in West Virginia was built in the late 1960s to safeguard the US Senate in the event of nuclear war. The top-secret project was designed to house 1,100 people, hidden beneath the West Virginia wing of the Greenbrier resort, behind 18-tonne blast-proof doors. The two-storey building has bedrooms kitted out with bunk beds, decontamination showers and its own power plant. Visitors are welcome on daily tours to explore the 153 rooms.

Underground city, Butte, Montana, USA

<p>silky/Shutterstock</p>

silky/Shutterstock

This secret, deserted world beneath Butte, in Montana, includes a barber shop, shoe shops, a prison and speakeasy. These are well-preserved relics from the early 20th century, when mining was at its height and there was prohibition. The population swelled to around 100,000 and space was at a premium, so people started using underground areas connected by tunnels. Today, you can visit them on a subterranean tour.

Churchill War Rooms, London, England, UK

<p>Alex Holder/Alamy Stock Photo</p>

Alex Holder/Alamy Stock Photo

Now part of the Imperial War Museum in London, Churchill War Rooms were the underground headquarters below Westminster where Winston Churchill and his government sheltered during the Blitz. Many of the rooms have been left just as they were when the lights were switched off in 1945. The intriguing level of detail makes it easy to imagine the tense atmosphere when Churchill’s inner circle was planning wartime strategies.

Emerald Cave, Lake Mead, Arizona, USA

<p>Kerrick James/Alamy Stock Photo</p>

Kerrick James/Alamy Stock Photo

A 45-minute drive from the bright lights of Vegas you’ll find the unspoiled Black Canyon. Join a guided kayak tour through the unusual rock formations and still waters of Emerald Cove. Its namesake cave is particularly breathtaking. The sun’s reflection off the surrounding cavern’s yellow-brown walls combined with blue from the sky, gives the water a vivid green appearance.

Fingal’s Cave, Isle of Staffa, Scotland, UK

<p>Jonathan Hoseana/Shutterstock</p>

Jonathan Hoseana/Shutterstock

This spectacular sea cave on the uninhabited Isle of Staffa in Scotland's southern Hebrides has a striking appearance. Fingal’s Cave, with its neat hexagonal columns of basalt, is similar in appearance to a Gothic building, yet it isn’t man-made. You can walk overland to the cave's large arched entrance and explore the extraordinary formation up close. Alternatively take a boat trip to pass by the gaping mouth of the vast cavern.

King Arthur’s Labyrinth, Corris, Wales, UK

<p>King Arthur's Labyrinth/Facebook</p>

King Arthur's Labyrinth/Facebook

Deep underground, beneath the mountains of southern Snowdonia, where mid-Wales meets North Wales, is a disused slate mine. Book onto a family-friendly tour where a cloaked boatman will lead guests past a waterfall, along winding tunnels and into vast underground caverns, all the while recounting Welsh myths and legends of King Arthur and wizard Merlin.

Valley of Fire cave, Valley of Fire State Park, Nevada, USA

<p>Edwin Verin/Shutterstock</p>

Edwin Verin/Shutterstock

This rusty-red cavern is only four-foot wide and deep (1sqm), but its vibrant colour and otherworldly formations make it worth the visit. The sandstone rock has slowly been eroded by wind, forming the Windstone Arch and alien-like shapes. The attraction is hidden out of sight and could easily be overlooked, down a dirt track in Nevada’s Valley of Fire State Park. You don’t need a tour to visit, but will need the GPS coordinates.

Basilica Cistern, Istanbul, Turkey

<p>saiko3p/Shutterstock</p>

saiko3p/Shutterstock

The largest of many underground water reservoirs in Istanbul, this colossal tank was built beneath an ancient basilica by Byzantine Emperor Justinianus I in AD 532. A total of 336 columns – many of them 'recycled' from older temples – support the structure and visitors can explore on raised platforms. The cistern lay undiscovered until the 16th century, when a visiting Frenchman was intrigued by locals who could fish (carp still swim in the waters) from their basements.

Portuguese Cistern of El Jadida, Mazagan, Morocco

<p>javarman/Shutterstock</p>

javarman/Shutterstock

Preserved remnants of the former Portuguese occupation of Moroccan port city Mazagan (El Jadida) can be found at this intriguing site. Although control ended in 1769, the fortification of the old town and the remarkable cistern beneath remain much as they were. The cistern was a filming location for Orson Welles’ Othello, and the shadows and reflections from the water make it a mysterious space to explore.

 

Llechwedd Slate Caverns, Llechwedd, Wales, UK

<p>zipworld.co.uk</p>

zipworld.co.uk

These underground slate caves in North Wales have been re-created as an exciting subterranean playground. The brightly lit cavern holds six huge trampoline-style nets, the highest is at 180 foot (55m) – think cathedral spire kind of height – and there are chutes to drop between levels.

Elbe Tunnel, Hamburg, Germany

<p>Bildagentur Zoonar GmbH/Shutterstock</p>

Bildagentur Zoonar GmbH/Shutterstock

Hamburg’s gorgeous Art-Deco St. Pauli Elbtunnel, now known as the Old Elbe Tunnel, was built in 1911 to provide a more direct route for dock workers making their way from southern banks of the Elbe river to Landungsbruecken piers in St. Pauli. The 1,498-foot-long (426m) arched tiled underpass sits 79 feet (24m) under the river surface and is lined with atmospheric lamps. After several new bridges were built in the 1970s, the Elbe Tunnel is now used mainly by pedestrians and cyclists and is one of the most popular tourist attractions in the city.

The Cave of Altamira, Santillana del Mar, Spain

<p>Sergi Reboredo/Alamy Stock Photo</p>

Sergi Reboredo/Alamy Stock Photo

Only discovered in 1868, this extraordinary cave in northern Spain is covered with prehistoric paintings of bison, deer and horses believed to be over 14,000 years old. Understandably, the cave has been closed to the public since 1977 for conservation reasons, but an exact replica has been created nearby for visitors to explore. This ‘Neo-cave’ mimics the original cave’s structure and artwork, with each painting painstakingly reproduced using the same techniques as the original artists.

Read on for abandoned underground attractions you probably didn't know existed...