Mongolia needs to be approached not as a checklist destination but as a study in contrast—between nomadic past and urban present, isolation and global ambition.
Its capital, Ulaanbaatar, is not a city that eases you in gently. It rises from the Tuul River valley in a sweep of concrete towers, Buddhist monasteries, Soviet-era blocks and distant mountains that seem to hold the capital in a quiet embrace. Bordering the vast expanse of Bogd Khan Uul …
