
Places you can't visit in 2023: Some popular attractions are under renovation or moving into new digs. But others, like Hong Kong's Jumbo Kingdom Floating Restaurant (pictured), are saying a permanent goodbye. Click through to see more.

9/11 Tribute Museum, New York City: This small, local-run museum closed in 2022 but will maintain its digital presence.

The Museum of London, UK: It will not only relocate but rebrand in the year to come, becoming The London Museum.

Jurong Bird Park, Singapore: This aviary isn't shutting down permanently -- instead, it will relocate and become part of a new eco-tourism attraction.

The Queen Mary, Long Beach, California: The Art Deco sailing vessel needs several million dollars' worth of repairs before she can welcome visitors again.

Dublin Writers Museum, Ireland: This Irish museum shut its doors in 2022 when its owners decided it "no longer meets the expectation of the contemporary museum visitor."

TeamLab Borderless, Tokyo: The innovative digital art museum has found a new home in Japan's capital, but there's no firm reopening date yet.

The Edo-Tokyo Museum, Tokyo: And also in Tokyo, this history museum is undergoing a three-year upgrade and refurbishment.

The Underground Museum, Los Angeles: Despite celebrity friends like Beyonce and John Legend, this art museum permanently shuttered in 2022.

Train Street, Hanoi, Vietnam: This picturesque street became a victim of its own popularity, with too many tourists stopping to take photos on the train tracks. The government has ordered it closed and put up barriers.


