The Buddhist holy place is called Here.
Lumbini where Buddha was born, Bodh Gaya where Buddha became enlightened, Sarnath where Buddha gave his first sermon, and Kushinagar where Buddha died are the most important holy places for buddhists.
First off, Buddhism has no "holy" buildings as there is no god worship or traditions in Buddhism. There are are historically significant sites for events in Buddhist history, ancient temples and schools and monuments - but no holy ones.
Goofularne
A monk
There is no holy city of Buddhism. There are, however, four places that the Buddha recommended that his followers visit, namely, his birth place, where he woke up or became enlightened, where he gave his first sermon, and where he died. According to the Buddhist teaching (dharma), there is no place is that more holy or sacred than any other place. Each place is equally sacred. That is why there is no holy city of Buddhism.
a synnagoge
There is no reason that a Buddhist would regard or use the Bible as a holy book. The two approaches to spirituality are significantly different.
Buddhist New Year,
Buddhists worship in a 'pagoda.'
The concept does not apply in Buddhism.
The Tipitaka. :)
It is called a shrine.
The altar