Ontario College of Art and Design, Toronto, Canada
This crossword
puzzle checked box appears, at a distance, to be hovering Close Encounters–style
above an otherwise mundane Toronto neighborhood. As you approach, its
improbability only increases. British architect Will Alsop planted this
collection of galleries and studio spaces on brightly colored columns so
insouciantly angled and skinny that they barely look like they can support
themselves.
Nearby Oddity: There goes the neighborhood: Daniel
Libeskind’s bizarre 2007 crystalline addition to Toronto’s Royal Ontario Museum is just a mile away.
The Bar Code Building, St. Petersburg, Russia
Near the banks
of the Neva River, this trade complex by Vitruvius & Sons transforms the
world’s most ubiquitous symbol of commerce—the bar code—into a powerful
architectural motif. It can be read as an update of American-style roadside
classics like the giant Dixie Cup water tower of Lexington, KY, or Detroit’s
giant Uniroyal Tire. The rust-red steel building brightens an otherwise bleak
urban setting.
Strange
Trend: There’s also a
Barcode House by the Dutch architecture firm
MVRDV on the outskirts of Munich, but it’s much more subtle.
Ramot Polin Apartments, Jerusalem, Israel
Polish-born
architect Zvi Hecker’s experiment in multi-unit
residential construction is not
as well known as the Habitat housing Moshe
Safdie designed for Expo 67 in Montreal, but at 720 units is much
larger. It was also an exercise in using prefabricated
components, at least in the first two of its
five phases. With its crazy
pentagonal design, the Ramot Polin Apartments
resemble a housing project for
honeybees.
Behind the
Scenes: This highly
unorthodox complex was commissioned by the Israeli ministry of housing
specifically for highly orthodox Jewish families.
Selfridges Department Store, Birmingham, England
The Birmingham branch of Selfridges is a billowy mattress of a building, clad in 15,000
shimmery aluminum discs like that famous Paco Rabanne dress. It was designed by
Future Systems—the name tells you pretty
much everything you need to know about the firm—to be a landmark and a catalyst
for the revitalization of a largely moribund city center. “An ersatz urban
cliff, a giant sea anemone, a friendly, blob-like alien, the mother of all
magic mushrooms,” wrote Guardian architecture critic Jonathan Glancey.
“This is the department store as unalloyed architectural entertainment.”
Step Inside: The interior, with floaty white
escalators crisscrossing in an open atrium, looks like a scene from Fritz
Lang’s Metropolis.
Columbus Lighthouse, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
Under
construction for some 40 years, and inaugurated
in time for the 500th anniversary of Christopher Columbus’s initial
landing in the New World (which
was not on Hispaniola, but in the Bahamas), this
monstrously spooky concrete monument, ten stories high and 688 feet long, reputedly
cost the impoverished nation some $70 million to build. The lighthouse contains
what are purported to be the explorer’s bones.
Weird Wiring: When the lighthouse projects a
cross-shaped beam into the night sky, it’s so bright that not only can it be seen for some 40 miles, but it drains electrical power from
surrounding neighborhoods. It’s not turned on very often.
Bioscleave House, East Hampton, NY
Husband and wife
artists Arakawa and Madeline Gins designed this intentionally unsettling house
in 2008. With its bumpy, hilly floors and a wildly asymmetrical plan—even the
electrical outlets are at weird angles—it’s supposed to stimulate the immune
systems of its occupants by keeping them from ever becoming comfortable. This
relentless “tentativeness,” the artists believe, is the key to immortality.
Embrace the
Strange: This house can
be yours. It’s currently offered by Sotheby’s Realty for $4 million.
Oriental Pearl TV Tower, Shanghai, China
Nothing else on
earth quite looks like the Oriental Pearl. It was once the tallest structure on
the Pudong side of Shanghai’s Huangpu River until it was overshadowed by the
Shanghai World Financial Center in 2007. Designed by Jiang Huan Cheng of the
Shanghai Modern Architectural Design Co. and completed in 1995, it stands 1,535
feet tall and is easily the world’s greatest assemblage of habitable disco
balls (11!), housing several sightseeing observatories, a revolving restaurant,
and a “space hotel.”
Tall Tale: Both Shanghai towers have recently been
dwarfed by the 2,001-foot-tall Guangzhou TV and Sightseeing Tower.
The Atomium, Brussels, Belgium
A 1958 World’s
Fair leftover, the Atomium is far more eccentric than the 1964 Unisphere in New York or the 1962 Space Needle in Seattle. Conceived by an engineer, André Waterkeyn,
it is a gigantic replica of an iron crystal molecule and was intended to
symbolize “the peaceful use of atomic energy for scientific purposes.” Five of
its nine spheres are accessible to visitors, as is its maze of interconnecting
tubes.
Quirky Quote: According to the Atomium
website: “The completely steel-clad Atomium is a kind of UFO in the cultural
history of Humanity, a mirror turned simultaneously towards the past and the
future, comparing our Utopias of yesterday with our dreams for tomorrow.”
Elbe Philharmonic, Hamburg, Germany
What’s really
freakish here is the contrast between the new building—a liquidy-looking glass
thingamajig—and the old building it uses for its podium: a stolid, workaday
1960s waterfront warehouse. This odd couple, united by the Swiss architecture
firm Herzog & de Meuron and scheduled for completion in 2012, will be a new
cultural complex for Hamburg’s harbor, featuring a public plaza on the old
warehouse roof, a hotel, some apartments, and a wildly biomorphic philharmonic
hall.
Odd Trend: This new building atop old building
thing is a bona fide trend. See: New York’s Hearst Tower by Foster + Partners.
Spittelau District Heating Plant, Vienna, Austria
Highly eccentric
painter and architect Friedensreich Hundertwasser,
fond of bright colors, crooked lines, and overall visual cacophony, designed
this garbage-burning heating plant on the Donau Canal to look like Vienna’s answer to the Magic Kingdom. With its crazy quilt façade, decorative columns
topped with gold balls, and a pollution-scrubbing smokestack, it suggests a
mirage rather than a working piece of urban infrastructure.
Odd
Couple: There are two of these oddities. The Maishima Incineration Plant in Osaka,
Japan, is an exact replica.
Container City II, London
There have since been many copycats, but this colorful addition to the original “container city” (the first modular live/work structure of its kind when it was built in 2001) at Trinity Buoy Wharf in London’s Docklands stands out as an example of sustainable architecture (80 percent of the combined building is created from recycled shipping containers and other materials). Completed in 2002, its ziggurat shape and brightly colored exteriors, not surprisingly, have attracted many artists, who live and work here today.House Attack, Vienna
At first glance, the base of the MUMOK (Museum Moderner Kunst) is an unimpressive-looking stone slab, but look up and you’ll see the strange factor. Designed by artist Erwin Wurm, the installation piece is a sculpture of a one-family house that symbolizes “the everyday, privacy, as well as small-mindedness.”Kansas City Public Library, MO
The south wall of the library’s parking garage resembles a bookshelf that would dwarf anything lining the walls of the 50-Foot-Tall Woman’s house: each book is around 25 feet tall and nine feet wide. It was constructed as an homage to 22 favorite literary titles, chosen by patrons of the library (then, of course, approved by the board of trustees).Museum of Contemporary Art, Rio de Janeiro
Fret not! Even
though this building strongly resembles a flying saucer—even more eerily true
when it’s lit up at night—Rio has not been occupied by aliens,
but rather by the design prowess of Oscar Niemeyer. After making their way up
the winding red path to the entrance, visitors can enjoy views of Guanabara
Bay, Sugarloaf Mountain, and the surrounding cityscape—along with museum
exhibitions.
Edificio Mirador, Madrid
Designed by
Dutch architecture firm MVRDV—known for its unusual and striking
construction—this residential building, set in the northeast part of Madrid,
was designed as a frame for the distant landscape, but more resembles a Borg
spaceship. Oh, and that open middle section? It also serves as an outdoor
meeting area for residents to take in the unobstructed views.
Fuji Television Building, Tokyo
It resembles
something created with an Erector Set, but this building—which took three years
to complete and serves as the head office for Fuji TV—isn’t child’s play. It
was designed to be sturdy enough to call itself earthquake-proof. Studio
tours—there are 10 studios in this office—are offered for about $5 (for adults)
and grant visitors access to the 1,200-ton sphere on top, which houses an
observation deck.
Druzhba Holiday Center, Yalta, Ukraine
Overlooking
a popular beach in the faded Soviet resort town of Yalta, this hotel—built in
1984 by Ukrainian architect Igor Vasilevsky—may lack an imaginative name, but
its hulking cylindrical mass is unmissable. Guests enter the property via a
catwalk bridge surrounded by glass; inside the complex, which is supported by
giant cement legs, a series of staircases and elevators connect public spaces
and accommodations—many of which have panoramic views of the Black Sea.
Cube Houses, Rotterdam, Netherlands
Known
locally as Kubuswoningen, these attached Piet Blom–designed residences on
Overblaak Street were unveiled in 1984 to oohs and ahhhs. The architect tilted
the traditional house structure, a cube, some 45 degrees, placing it on a
hexagon-shaped pylon; all the walls and windows are angled at 54.7 degrees, and
each apartment is about 900 square feet, but only 225 square feet of that is
usable space.
Solar Furnace, Font-Romeu-Odeillo-Via, France
The
ancient Egyptians and Greeks may have figured out how to harness the power of
the sun using glass, but the solar scientists working in this sun-bathed town
in the Pyrenees Mountains have perfected the process. The world’s largest solar
furnace, on the exterior of this curious undulating building, uses some 10,000
mirrors to focus the rays and then bounce them off a gigantic concave mirror to
produce temperatures above 5,430 degrees Fahrenheit.
Lloyd’s Building, London
Also called the
Inside-Out Building, the controversial headquarters of venerable Lloyd’s
insurance at One Lime Street has doubled as a tourist attraction since its
completion in 1986 (it even has a gift shop). The towering
steel-and-glass-framed building was conceived by Richard Rogers (of Pompidou
Centre fame), who wanted to place all mechanicals, elevators, etc. on the
building’s exterior—much to the amusement of passersby.
Kunsthaus, Graz, Austria
London
architects Peter Cook and Colin Fournier created this avant-garde celluloid
building—sometimes called the “friendly alien.” Hoping to create a “black box
of hidden tricks” to inspire curators, the architects dotted the building’s
sleek skin with adjustable lights to create external images belying the art
museum’s interior collection. The valvelike nodes on the roof let in natural
light—making this bio-inspired building eco-friendly too.
Office Center 1000 3 a.k.a. Banknote, Kaunas, Lithuania
Form certainly
meets function at this bill-wrapped building in Lithuania’s second-largest
city. Housing international bank offices and Lithuanian businesses within its
capitalist walls, the structure fancies itself as “one of the Baltic region’s
most daring and original construction projects.” The 10-story façade is hung
with 4,500 painted enamel squares to create an image of the 1925 1000-litas
banknote.
Agbar Tower, Barcelona
This
474-foot-tall tower may look like London’s Gherkin building, but its visionary,
Jean Nouvel, says he was inspired not by Sir Norman Foster but by Spanish
architect Antonio Gaudí. The Agbar’s more than 4,500 windows give it a
geyser-like glimmer, while the structure is supposed to evoke the mountains
around Barcelona (though many locals have more off-color ideas about what it
evokes).
Blur Building, Yverdon-les-Bains, Switzerland
Ensconced in a
perpetual swath of man-made fog, the Blur Building, designed by Elizabeth
Diller and Ricardo Scofidio, was built for the Swiss Expo in 2002 on Lake
Neuchatel. The 31,500 nozzles spray a fine mist that adjusts to changing
weather conditions to create the same “blur” effect in all seasons. The inside
space is as amorphous as the outside “walls,” and downstairs you’ll find a
water bar to purchase artisanal water.
Cybertecture Egg, Mumbai, India
Architecture
is so 20th century. Welcome to the age of cybertecture, which,
according to the firm James Law Cybertecture International, is not just about
“concrete, steel and glass, but also the new intangible materials of
technology, multimedia, intelligence and interactivity.” The egg—which will
house offices and is slated for completion in late 2010—uses less surface area
than “old style” buildings and incorporates new technologies, like bathrooms
that track workers’ weight and blood pressure. Can anyone say Big Brother?
The Church of Hallgrimur, Reykjavik, Iceland
In the land of
fire and ice, it makes sense that even the holiest places resemble natural
phenomena. And when architect Guojon Samuelsson began this church in 1937,
Icelandic basalt lava flows were what he had in mind. It’s hard to miss this
imposing structure, located in the center of town, and you won’t want to miss
the views from its observation tower.
Nakagin Capsule Tower, Tokyo
Remember
the tales of Japanese bachelor salarymen living in pods? That was the idea
behind these 140 cubes from architect Kisho Kurokawa, finished in 1972. It
kicked off the capsule architecture movement, with cozy spaces 8 x 12 x 7 feet
that were designed for minimalist living at its most minimal, with a bed, a
wall of appliances, a tiny bathroom, and a small circular window. While the
building has fallen into disrepair as of late, it still stands, says the New
York Times, as a “powerful reminder of paths not taken, of the possibility
of worlds shaped by different sets of values.”
Montreal Biosphere, Montreal
There’s nothing
like a World’s Fair to inspire odd architecture.
That’s exactly what happened for the 1967 World’s Fair in
Montreal, when architect Buckminster Fuller
designed this geodesic dome. His structure
bubbles up from the trees on Saint
Helen’s Island to 200 feet high and 250 feet in
diameter. It was an enclosed
structure until a fire in 1976 destroyed the
outer layer. Today, the thin-shell
structure is owned and run by Environment Canada
as a museum, with interactive
exhibits on biodiversity and climate change.
Wonderworks, Pigeon Forge, TN, and Orlando, FL
Who
doesn’t love an upside-down building? No, it’s not a cutting-edge design from
some wunderkind architect—it’s just an amusement park, complete with a slightly
terrifying “Hoot N’ Holler Dinner Show” (Tennessee) and the “Outta Control
Magic Comedy Dinner Show” (Orlando). Look for two more of these wrong-side-up
buildings to open in Panama City, FL (this summer), and Myrtle Beach, SC (in
2011)
Haewoojae, Suwon, South Korea
Better known as
the toilet-shaped house, this showcase of superior plumbing was built by Korean
Assembly Representative Sim Jae-Duck—a.k.a. Mr. Toilet—and his World Toilet
Organization. It’s intended to celebrate the cultural centrality of the toilet
and raise awareness of the plight of the world’s toilet-less. “We should learn
to go beyond seeing toilets as just a place for defecation,” the late Mr. Sim
once said, “but also as a place of culture where people can rest, meditate and
be happy.” And who can argue?
Wacky
Washroom: The house has
four toilets, including a spectacular central restroom with floor-to-ceiling
glass walls that turn opaque when the facilities are in use, and a sound system
that supplies a soothing classical soundtrack.
Source: travelandleisure
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