7 ways you can virtually escape without leaving your house during the coronavirus outbreak, from hitting a Broadway show to walking the Great Wall of China

Advertisement
7 ways you can virtually escape without leaving your house during the coronavirus outbreak, from hitting a Broadway show to walking the Great Wall of China
stonehenge

This is a developing story. Check back for updates and additional recommendations.

Advertisement

Advertisement
{{}}

Tune into the Metropolitan Opera's website each night at 7:30 p.m. ET through the end of March for a free, livestreamed show.

Tune into the Metropolitan Opera's website each night at 7:30 p.m. ET through the end of March for a free, livestreamed show.

In response to New York City's ban on public gatherings of 500 or more people, New York's Metropolitan Opera has suspended shows through the end of March. Until operations resume, the Opera is streaming past performances for free on its website at 7:30 p.m. ET each night. The performances will be available to watch for 20 hours post stream.

Source: Metropolitan Opera

Listen to Broadway stars perform Broadway hits while their shows are on pause in a series of "Living Room Concerts" posted to BroadwayWorld.com.

Listen to Broadway stars perform Broadway hits while their shows are on pause in a series of "Living Room Concerts" posted to BroadwayWorld.com.

Like the Metropolitan Opera, Broadway has shuttered productions through April 12 due to New York City's ban on mass public gatherings. In the meantime, Broadway stars have partnered with Broadway World to produce a series of virtual mini-performances.

The performances, filmed by stars in their living rooms and posted on BroadwayWorld.com, are free to watch; however, Broadway World asks viewers to consider making a donation to The Actors Fund or Broadway Cares, which support entertainment professionals in times of need.

Source: Broadway World

Advertisement

Float through an amber kelp forest in the Channel Islands, hang out with manatees in Florida, and watch bald eagles nest in real-time on Explore.org, the world's largest live nature cam network.

Float through an amber kelp forest in the Channel Islands, hang out with manatees in Florida, and watch bald eagles nest in real-time on Explore.org, the world's largest live nature cam network.

Explore.org has hundreds of webcams set up in national parks and wildlife sanctuaries around the world and aggregates their livestreams on its website. These include the underwater Channel Islands Kelp Forest cam; the above-water Manatee Cam at Florida's Blue Spring Park; and the Decorah Eagles cam, positioned at eye-level with bald eagle nests in Decorah, Iowa.

Source: Explore.org

Tour Stonehenge, Machu Picchu, and the Taj Mahal in 360 degrees through Google Arts & Culture.

Tour Stonehenge, Machu Picchu, and the Taj Mahal in 360 degrees through Google Arts & Culture.

Google Arts & Culture, thanks to its 360-degree mapping technology, offers an inside look at some of the world's most iconic attractions.

Source: Google Arts & Culture

Advertisement

Tour and browse the digitized collections of more than 1,200 cultural institutions around the world including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, and the Musée d'Orsay in Paris through Google Arts & Culture.

Tour and browse the digitized collections of more than 1,200 cultural institutions around the world including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, and the Musée d'Orsay in Paris through Google Arts & Culture.

In addition to iconic monuments and tourist attractions, Google Arts & Culture allows users to tour the world's foremost museums in 360 degrees and browse hi-res images of their collections. The collections are searchable by artist, art movement, and country, among other categories, and Google Arts & Culture's map feature populates nearby museums using your location data.

Source: Google Arts & Culture

Hike over six miles of the 2,000-year-old Great Wall of China virtually on TheChinaGuide.com, a website dedicated to China travel.

Hike over six miles of the 2,000-year-old Great Wall of China virtually on TheChinaGuide.com, a website dedicated to China travel.

The China Guide, a Beijing-based travel agency, has developed a virtual tour of one the Great Wall of China's most iconic sections, Jinshanling to Simatai. This section crosses the border between Beijing and Hebei provinces and has been the go-to destination for many magazine shoots thanks to its sweeping views, according to the agency. It is currently closed to visitors due to safety reasons.

Source: The China Guide

Advertisement

Peer inside the enclosures of pandas, polar bears, and beluga whales across the United States thanks to zoo livestreams.

Peer inside the enclosures of pandas, polar bears, and beluga whales across the United States thanks to zoo livestreams.

A number of zoos and aquariums around the country have set up webcams in their most popular enclosures. The Houston Zoo, Monterey Aquarium, and San Diego Zoo each run multiple webcams. The Atlanta Zoo runs a dedicated livestream of their pandas, and the Georgia Aquarium runs a livestream of its beluga whales.

Do you have a virtual escape recommendation? Email this reporter at mwiley@businessinsider.com.

Read more:

Coronavirus live updates: Here's everything we know.

Here are the latest major events that have been canceled or postponed because of the coronavirus outbreak

The Louvre, the Met, and multiple Disney theme parks are closed because of the coronavirus. Here are all of the major museum and theme park closures so far.

A running list of countries that are on lockdown because of the coronavirus pandemic