Concepts
Major Civilizations
Leaders
City-States
Districts
Buildings
Wonders and Projects
Units
Unit Promotions
Great People
Technologies
Civics
Governments and Policies
Religions
Terrains and Features
Resources
Improvements and Routes

Introduction

Wonders

Alhambra

Angkor Wat

Apadana

Big Ben

Biosphère

Bolshoi Theatre

Broadway

Chichen Itza

Colosseum

Colossus

Cristo Redentor

Eiffel Tower

Estádio do Maracanã

Etemenanki

Forbidden City

Great Library

Great Lighthouse

Great Zimbabwe

Hagia Sophia

Hanging Gardens

Hermitage

Huey Teocalli

Jebel Barkal

Mahabodhi Temple

Mausoleum at Halicarnassus

Mont St. Michel

Oracle

Oxford University

Petra

Potala Palace

Pyramids

Ruhr Valley

Statue of Zeus

Stonehenge

Sydney Opera House

Terracotta Army

Torre de Belém

Venetian Arsenal

Projects

Big Ben
Description
+1 Economic policy slot. +50% Gold.

Must be built next to a River adjacent to a Commercial Hub district with a Bank.
Historical Context
The giant bell, Big Ben, is housed in the Elizabethan Tower – so named to celebrate the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II (being just the “Clock Tower” before that) – at the north end of the Palace of Westminster, where sits the Houses of Parliament. Being rather casual in language, most Brits and flocks of tourists tend to refer to the whole thing as “Big Ben.” The great 16-ton bell was cast in August 1856 at the foundry at Stockton-on-Tees and recast at the Whitechapel Bell Foundry in April 1858 after it cracked while being transported to London. The pendulum clockwork was designed by the Astronomer Royal and crafted by the clockmaker Edward Dent and his stepson Frederick; it was ready in 1854. So fine is the precision, that adding or removing a penny (English, of course) to the pendulum will change the speed by four-tenths of a second each day. But all had to await the completion of the clock tower itself, which wasn’t done until 1859. Despite being silenced during wartime and the occasional breakdown, Big Ben has chimed the hour ever since.
PortraitSquare
icon_building_big_ben
“Don’t watch the big clock; do what it does. Keep going.”
– Sam Levenson

Traits

Removed if game started after
Atomic Era
+6 Gold
+3 Great Merchant points per turn.
+1000 Tourism from Rock Concerts.

Requirements

Technology
icon_tech_economics
Economics
Building
icon_building_bank
Bank
Adjacency
icon_district_commercial_hub
Commercial Hub
Must be adjacent to a river
Production Cost
Base Cost: 1450 Production
PortraitSquare
icon_building_big_ben
Description
+1 Economic policy slot. +50% Gold.

Must be built next to a River adjacent to a Commercial Hub district with a Bank.
Historical Context
The giant bell, Big Ben, is housed in the Elizabethan Tower – so named to celebrate the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II (being just the “Clock Tower” before that) – at the north end of the Palace of Westminster, where sits the Houses of Parliament. Being rather casual in language, most Brits and flocks of tourists tend to refer to the whole thing as “Big Ben.” The great 16-ton bell was cast in August 1856 at the foundry at Stockton-on-Tees and recast at the Whitechapel Bell Foundry in April 1858 after it cracked while being transported to London. The pendulum clockwork was designed by the Astronomer Royal and crafted by the clockmaker Edward Dent and his stepson Frederick; it was ready in 1854. So fine is the precision, that adding or removing a penny (English, of course) to the pendulum will change the speed by four-tenths of a second each day. But all had to await the completion of the clock tower itself, which wasn’t done until 1859. Despite being silenced during wartime and the occasional breakdown, Big Ben has chimed the hour ever since.
“Don’t watch the big clock; do what it does. Keep going.”
– Sam Levenson

Traits

Removed if game started after
Atomic Era
+6 Gold
+3 Great Merchant points per turn.
+1000 Tourism from Rock Concerts.

Requirements

Technology
icon_tech_economics
Economics
Building
icon_building_bank
Bank
Adjacency
icon_district_commercial_hub
Commercial Hub
Must be adjacent to a river
Production Cost
Base Cost: 1450 Production
Language
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