![]() ![]() ![]() The labyrinth at Villa Pisani / Patrick Denker, Wikimedia // CC BY 2.0 The castle itself was constructed in the 19th century for Count Gyula Andrássy, complete with the boxwood maze decorated by yew trees. Located along the Tisza River near the Hungarian-Slovakian border, the hedge maze at the Andrássy Castle is supposed to resemble a squid. The septuagenarian Ricci used fast-growing bamboo, as opposed to more traditional trees and shrubs, so he could see the maze completed before his death. The star-shaped maze, which opened in May 2015, was constructed using 200,000 bamboo plants and stretches for 20 acres. It’s also the result of a dare, made between Italian publisher Franco Maria Ricci and author Jorge Luis Borges after Ricci declared he wanted to build the world’s largest maze and Borges said it couldn’t be done. The world’s largest maze, the Masone Labyrinth, is located in an Italian town better known for giving the world Parmesan cheese. The Masone Labyrinth / Labirinto della Masone The estate also now includes a Safari Park, said to be the first outside Africa, as well as three smaller garden mazes. It’s part of 8000 acres that have belonged to the various Marquesses of Bath since the 16th century, 900 of which were beautified by famed landscape designer Lancelot “Capability” Brown (so nicknamed for his tendency to describe landscapes as having “great capabilities”). Longleat Maze, Warminster, Wiltshire, EnglandĬonstructed from more than 16,000 English yews, the maze at Longleat is the longest hedge maze in the world, stretching for close to 1.7 miles. Below, a selection of the most interesting and eye-catching from around the world. Hedge mazes have been a fixture of imposing estates for centuries, and have more recently been joined by corn mazes, straw mazes, and other confusing adventures in vegetation. Visitors expecting the towering greenery of the film will be disappointed, however-the Stanley’s maze is only three feet high, to prevent children from getting lost, let alone attacked by psychos. ![]() But the building that inspired the Overlook (and the Shining story in general)-the Stanley Hotel in Estes Park, Colorado-never actually had a hedge maze until 2015, when its owners finally gave in to public expectations and installed one. It’s one of the most memorable scenes in film history: an ax-wielding Jack Nicholson chasing his son through a hedge maze outside the Overlook Hotel during the climax of 1980’s The Shining. ![]()
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