Rock fortresses, cave temples, and ancient kingdoms — Sri Lanka's Cultural Triangle holds three UNESCO World Heritage Sites within a single day's drive. Here's how to do it properly.
The Cultural Triangle sits approximately 170 km from Colombo via the A1 and A6 highways — about 4 hours non-stop. Most visitors base themselves in or near Sigiriya and do day trips to surrounding sites.
Day 1: Colombo → Dambulla (170 km, 4 hrs). Visit caves in the afternoon. Stay in Sigiriya. Day 2: Sigiriya Rock at sunrise (gates open 6:30 AM), then Polonnaruwa ancient city in the afternoon (25 km east).
The 5th-century rock fortress rises 200 m above the surrounding jungle. The climb takes 45–60 minutes. Arrive at gate opening (6:30 AM) — the rock summit clouds over by mid-morning and crowds become relentless after 9 AM.
Parking is in a large official car park (LKR 300/day). Entrance for foreign tourists: USD 30. The famous Sigiriya frescoes are halfway up in a natural rock alcove — photography permitted, no flash.
Five interconnected cave temples 15 km south of Sigiriya. The 2,100 sq m of ceiling frescoes are the largest cave temple paintings in Asia. Best visited 2–4 PM when tour buses thin out. Park at the base of the 350-step climb.
The medieval capital (11th–13th century) is 55 km east of Sigiriya on the A11. Rent a bicycle from the entrance gate (LKR 300–500/day) rather than driving your car through the site. Key sites: the Gal Vihara rock-cut Buddha statues, the Vatadage circular relic house, and the Royal Palace complex. Allow 3–4 hours minimum.
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