Not by choice. I got lost on the beltway and ended up in downtown about rush hour. So I stopped and had dinner and shopped a little before getting back on the road.
We took a trip to Washington a couple years ago. One of Rhiannon8404’s friends was a stenographer for the House of Representatives at the time, so she gave us a ‘behind the scenes’ tour of the Capitol Building.
We spent 5 days total in Washington; we probably need three or four more trips in order to see ‘everything’…
Canberra is the capital city of Australia, I went there as a kid on a school trip and have little desire to return, although the War memorial was pretty cool. I wouldn’t mind seeing how that’s looking now, but not enough to actually travel to Canberra
Suva is the capital city of Fiji. Visited there on a boat cruise with the folks when I was a kid.
Wellington is the capital city of New Zealand. Actually nice place, visited there for a few days for work in 2000. Windy, interesting scenery, it’s so hilly that you walk into one entrance of a tall office building to find you’re on the 6th floor and need to get the elevator to the ground floor to walk out the other side. Friendly people, good tucker and bars. I’d happily go back.
Way back when, we almost lived in Canberra. The wife was considering Australian National University for her doctorate but ultimately stayed in country here.
I’ve passed through several capital cities, but don’t recall visiting a capitol building in:
Washington, DC
Philipsburg, Sint Maarten
Mexico City
Guatemala City
Bogotá, Colombia
Panama City, Panama
Oranjestad, Aruba
Basseterre, St Kitts and Nevis
St Johns, Antigua and Barbuda
Roseau, Dominica
Castries, St Lucia
Kingston, Jamaica
Kingstown, St Vincent and the Grenadines
St Georges, Grenada
Valletta, Malta
And if overseas territories/departments count then add:
Marigot, Saint Martin
Road Town, BVI
The Valley, Anguilla
George Town, Cayman Islands
Gustavia, St Barths
Plymouth, Montserrat
Basse-Terre, Guadeloupe
Fort-de-France, Martinique
I suppose several may not have a capitol building.
I lived in Canberra and have visited many times since. And despite what others say, I found it a very interesting place to live, with a great lifestyle (no pollution, no traffic problems, wonderful facilities).
I’ve also been to all of the state and territory capitals in Australia.
As for other countries’ capitals, I’ve visited Wellington, Suva, Jakarta, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Bangkok, Cape Town, Nairobi, Jerusalem, London, Dublin, Edinburgh, Paris, Berlin, Copenhagen, Stockholm, Reykjavik, Rome, Bern, Brussels, Amsterdam, Helsinki, Tallinn, Moscow, Vienna, Ottawa.
Visited Washington, DC a couple of years ago. A high school friend of mine was working as a court reporter for the House of Representatives. My family and I got a very thorough behind the scenes tour including visiting the floor of the House of Representatives by walking through the employee passages. We also saw the original Supreme Court chambers, which is also the room from which the first Morse code message was sent.
Ignoring the spelling stuff, No. But I’ve been in Brasilia. It was a trip. A big, vacant city. Did some “rock-star” quality shenanigans at the hotel I was in.
Most of the posters have indicated that they in fact do know the difference between a capital and a Capitol. However, because of the way the question was phrased it suggests the OP was confusing the two. Since most countries don’t have Capitols (or at least it’s not referred to as a capitol), whereas almost all have capitals, answering the presumed question rather than the actual one makes for a more interesting thread.
I’ve been to the capital of my country many times. It’s a nice city.
I’ve also been to the Parliament Buildings, where I visited the library, sat in on Parliamentary proceedings in the public gallery of the House of Commons, and saw the Memorial Chamber.
I just remembered that one of my duties for my first internship was to attend congressional hearings and then write up a summary, those were all in the office buildings, not the capitol building itself. I must have blocked out the memory because the were too exciting.