Built in 1746, this impressive aqueduct on the outskirts of town provided Larnaca's water supply until the 1930s.
Once part of a complicated water engineering system that used a combination of tunnels as well to deliver water into the town, it was constructed under orders of the local Ottoman governor and styled on typical Roman era aqueducts. Today, the still sturdy 33 arches rambling across the green fields are an impressive sight.
Come during the evening when the arches are lit up, or during the day, when sheep are grazed in the fields between the arches.