The International Harbin Ice and Snow Festival was inaugurated on January 5 with displays of several beautiful ice castles, monuments and landscapes.
British holidaymakers may be planning to holiday in 2012, but which destination to choose?
How will you be celebrate 2012? International Business Times UK takes a look at 10 New Year celebrations.
A detailed feature story depicting the essence of navigators and NFC in our daily lives, and their impact on our rapidly evolving life styles.
Up to 18 million cars are expected on roads in Christmas/New Year holiday rush.
Visitors to Britain could fall by up to 4 percent in 2012 as tourists try to avoid games hype.
Travellers looking to book a bargain flight might find one on Christmas Day.
Christmas markets offer an alternative to the high street shopping for Londoners.
The winners of the Travel Photographer of the Year award 2001 have been named (Slideshow)
World's 10 Most Dangerous Countries
The Marmite covered M1 is undergoing a huge clean-up operation after a tanker carrying over 20 tonnes of the yeast extract overturned last night.
As the November 30 airport strikes loom, IBTimes UK speaks to an insurance expert about how it may affect your travel insurance.
A video featuring a woman launching into a racist rant on a south London tram has gone viral less than 24 hours after it was posted online.
Thomas Cook, the beleaguered travel company, has secured a new credit facility worth £200 million from its bank lending group that will be available until April 30, 2013.
significant discoveries were simultaneously realized – the Sun’s position over Stonehenge, at its highest point in the year, was important for prehistoric people, the Stonehenge site was probably more sacred before the construction of Cursus and the sun worshippers had a stronger link to the site than previously thought.
Britons are bracing themselves for a weekend of gale-force winds and tidal waves.
In an attempt to manage the borders, former UKBA officials are being offered up to £450 for a single shift if they are willing to work during the walkout.
London Underground bosses have, once again, been accused of disrespect after the body of a second train death victim was stored in a cleaners' cupboard.
The financial troubles of Thomas Cook are attributed to the lower demand in the travel industry due to the global unrest.
According to a report compiled by Arup Consulting and the RAC Foundation, as many as four million cars will be added to British roads over the next 25 years. The forecast has raised concerns over environmental impacts, as well as the need to improve existing road networks.
Thousands of passengers are stranded for the second consecutive day as many flights were cancelled or delayed.
The plan to construct a new airport in Thames Estuary has got the support of the Prime Minister and other senior government officials.
A second plane destined for Birmingham has been grounded in India by Austrian Airline Comtel air and stopped from leaving until passengers paid £27,000 in unpaid fees.
It is official: London has enchanted the global shopper with its array of culture and classic style so much that it has been named the top shopping capital in Europe.
The Central Line has caused havoc for London workers after emergency repair shutdown the line between White City and Marble Arch.
While the embers of the horrific M5 fireball are still burning in people's memory, the police claim to have found ample leads which may help them crack the mystery on what really happened on that fatefu
The Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) has released the weirdest questions its staff has been asked by travellers who are in trouble.
Suicide attempts on the London Underground have soared in the last 10 years as recession worries hit hard
Cavers have linked over 60 miles (about 102 km) of caverns and natural tunnels under the high ground close to Kirkby Lonsdale in Cumbria. The caves are expanded through Cumbria, Lancashire and Yorkshire, knowing as Three Counties System, reported the BBC
A team of British archaeologists has found new evidence of a lost civilization in the country's desert regions. The team from the University of Leicester used satellites and aerial photographs to identify the remains of more than 100 fortified dams and villages with castle-like structures and several towns in the harsh desert lands.