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50 Times Architects Really Outdid Themselves And Deserved To Be Praised Online
Every now and then, we hear about funny architectural fails where lack of taste meets poor aesthetics and greets atrocious execution. Check out our previous features with such examples here, here, and here.
But way more rarely do we hear news about impressive architecture, time-defying buildings, and incredible structures. This is because it’s way more difficult to create an architectural wonder that reflects our environment, values, history, artistic sensibility, and many other aspects of our daily life.
Luckily, there is this corner of Reddit that collects “the beautiful impossibilities that we want to live in” and shares them with its 1.3M members. The subreddit is dedicated to high-quality photographs of some of the most impressive, conceptual, and historical buildings on our planet. So pull your seat closer and scroll down! After you’re done, be sure to share part 1 of the article.
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Preserved Edo Period Neighborhood In Japan
Takayama, about five hours by train from Tokyo. It's wonderful. Will never forget a little store that made their own soy sauce. (Because I was the idiot who thought, "You can actually MAKE soy sauce?")
Persian Mosque
Spellbinding Bookstore In Chengdu, Sichuan, China
“We’re fascinated by architecturally unique buildings because we live in a world where most goods are standardized and mass-produced—including the structures we inhabit,” Lisa Yaszek, a Regents Professor of Science Fiction Studies at Georgia Tech, told Bored Panda. Yaszek researches and teaches science fiction as a global language crossing centuries, continents, and cultures, and was happy to share some insights about architectural wonders with our readers.
According to Yaszek, “modern buildings depend on modular construction and prefabricated design, Western architectural trends that date back to the 1600s, when Parliament created the first modern building codes after the great fire of London in 1666 and when colonial settlers in America demanded homes built with English construction methods.”
Ukraine - Lviv, Staircase In The House Of Scientists
Hans & Gretel Pancake House In Zeewolde, Netherlands
This is not a building but a slide as you can see on the right side. It is part of a playground and belongs to a restaurant. It is nice but not as nice at it looks here. Still we went there often with our kids.
Thank you for the reminder that, on the WWW, not everything you see is real.
Load More Replies...Looks like someone took a drawing out of a children's book and made it into reality.
Hansel and Gretel is a brothers Grimm fairy tale so I am going to assume that either a description of the house was provided or an illustration for the builders to go by.
Load More Replies...It has some nice features inside en this gorgeous playground! I think it's not so well known in Holland
Load More Replies...This picture is only featuring party if the playground, on the left the candy store and right side climbing and slides. The pancake restaurant itself is also very cool (lots of "magic" inside as well. And they opened a haunted house a couple of months ago. https://www.hansengrietjezeewolde.nl/
What? Such a small country I live in and I just learned about it now??? ….. it still is like one hour and a half away by car though 😅
Have been there this week for the second time and this time I took some Dutch friends that were amazed by the place and the fact that they haven’t heard about it. The place is magical indeed and the picture is just showing the slider of the playground. Restaurant itself is also all about fantasy.
Kylemore Abbey In The Fog, Connemara, Galway, Ireland
It's pictures like this that explain why Ireland is known as 'The emerald isle.'
“Today, modular construction based on simple geometry and industrially produced components is used to create everything from houses to public buildings for the simple reason that it is extremely cost-effective,” the professor explained.
Moreover, “by way of contrast, both the very old and the very new, sometimes still conceptual buildings that people share on the ‘beautiful impossibilities we want to live in’ subreddit are anything but standardized boxes designed with cost-effectiveness in mind. Instead, these buildings tend toward the elaborate and surprising, whether that comes in the form of flowing organic lines, strangely abrupt geometries, or dizzying feats of engineering,” Yaszek explained.
The Reading Room - Royal Portuguese Cabinet Of Reading - Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
Nasir-Ol-Molk Mosque, Also Known As Pink Mosque, A Traditional Shiraz Mosque, Iran
Stained Glass Ceiling Hotel - Gran Hotel Ciudad De México, Mexico City
“Similarly,” she argues, “whether they are intricately detailed or severely plain, whether they dazzle the eye with a flurry of gem-like colors or invite it to rest peacefully on expanses of neutral blacks, grass, and whites, these beautiful impossibilities remind us that there are other, perhaps more important, values than efficiency.”
Yaszek explained that “instead, these buildings are literal monuments to human creativity, ingenuity, and perseverance—especially since so many of these architectural marvels were constructed before modern materials, machinery, and in some cases, even before modern math!”
Les Espaces D'abraxas, France
Has anyone been inside one? I look at them and I'm fascinated by how from above you can't really see them but inside I imagine they might be quite dark.
Hawa Mahal In Jaipur, India
Palace of the winds, it was so the ladies of the palace could watch parades without being seen. I went there in 2019, it was amazing, but I love all of India
A Beautiful House Surrounded By Rock And Trees In Hrensko
The professor believes that it’s no surprise that many of the people who comment on these images compare them to fairy tales and/or science fiction: "these buildings are so outside our everyday experience that we cannot help but think they must be from other times and worlds.”
“Finally, I love how these images bring people together, as viewers pool their knowledge of history, art, and culture to help each other make sense of the wonderful buildings and their origins. Imagine how fun it would be if we could all exchange our ideas about these buildings from inside, while exploring them together,” Yaszek concluded.
Romanian Athenaeum, Bucharest
The Inflatable "Gaia" Installation In The 18th Century Baroque Painted Hall Of The Old Royal Naval College, Greenwich, London, UK
Pietragalla, Italy
Leuven Town Hall (1448-1469) Belgium, One Of The Best-Known Gothic Town Halls Worldwide & It Took Three Architects And Thirty Years To Build It
Art Nouveau Facade Of A Jewelry Store In Lille, Hauts-De-France, Northern France
Château Frontenac, Quebec City, Canada
Wisteria Covered Terraced House In Argyll Road, Kensington, London, UK
Kailasa Temple In Ellora, India Made From A Single Rock
my brain can't even fathom the skill of architects, construction workers, planners, designers etc making structures from multiple pieces, never mind ones made from a single rock like this! and the fact that it's a very ancient building as well -- they were crazy freaking talented, and creative to be able to accomplish such feats w just their hands, mind and cruder/basic tools. mind: BLOWN
Castillo De Colomares In Spain
Trinity College Library - Dublin, Ireland
From the rare vantage point of upstairs. I wish we had been allowed to go upstairs when we were there last week.
Paris, France
I know I can't afford the rent, but just seeing that door everyday would make me happy.
Mvrdv's Brand New Housing Complex In Amsterdam, Netherlands
This Restaurant In Paris Looking Like A Museum
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum - Boston
There is a documentary of this place concerning a heist which took place there!
The 18th Babrican Gate Of Tollymore Forest, Mourne Mountains, Northern Ireland
Barbican Gate: A barbican (from Old French: barbacane) is a fortified outpost or fortified gateway, such as at an outer defense perimeter of a city or castle, or any tower situated over a gate or bridge which was used for defensive purposes.
Church In The Rock
A Traditional Medieval Cave House With A Courtyard Found In The Desert Of Libya
Chahar Bagh, Esfehan, Iran
Astronomical Tower In Prague, Czech Republic
I marvel at this every time I see pictures of this. Thanks to my late great aunt, I have a fascination for clocks.
Baps Akshardham Temple, Delhi, India
If our time doesn't build beautiful places, what does that say about us? We applaud previous generations for beauty, but complain about the now.
The Iconic San Francisco Cliff House Before It Was Destroyed In A 1907 Fire
Castillo De Colomares, Spain
A monument to celebrate Christopher Columbus. It looks great, but I wish it had a different purposse.
Drachenburg Castle In Germany, Built In 1884
In the second half of the 19th century, those who could afford it would build their own folly. This is possibly the world's largest. I agree you can live in it, but for the rest ...
Four Seasons Resort. Bali
When it rains, does the lily pond made a waterfall all the way around?
Opera Garnier In Paris
Hammam Essalihine Is A Roman Bathhouse Still In Use After 2,000 Years In Khenchela, Algeria
The Fox Theater's Stage From The Main Floor
This is in Detroit, Michigan, USA. There's also a Fox Theater in Atlanta, Georgia, USA, which is not quite this elaborate but also isn't that far off, either.
Niagara Mohawk Building Built In Art Deco Style, NYC
Durbar Hall Of Mysore Palace, India
Spectacular Adalaj Stepwell In Ahmedabad, India
30th Street Station In Philly Is Like An Art Deco Cathedral
A shame a lot of the walls are covered with giant banners of advertisements...this photo must've been taken during a transition or something.
Brownstones In Park Slope, Brooklyn, NYC
Hotel Belvédère, Switzerland
Harbin Opera House Designed By Mad Architects
Goethe's Lookout In The Czech Republic
Grundtvig’s Church Interior
Yemen
Love how every other one is a specific building and then it goes .... Yemen! Like the whole thing lol
Federal-Style House In The Snow, Washington, D. C
Looking at these I am stunned at beauty, creativity, and work that went into building them. It would be nice if we humans, as a species, would, instead of weapons, would use things like "who has the most creative buildings, whose population has their needs met, or whose country produced the most creative art" as our measuring stick for determining who is best. The headlines could be "Russia, in a bid to take back parts of the Ukrainian nation, stepped up their attack today by achieving food access for 100% of the people. The Ukraine responded with matching Russias offensive, eliminating homelessness in the last 5%, and erecting roadside waystations, allowing all travelers a free place to rest. We will wait for the Russian response".
What a fantastic though: ruling the world through doing good
Load More Replies...I wish I could’ve given many of these masterpieces multiple upvotes, they’re truly stunning
How on earth did Angkor Wat NOT made this list!? Walls 1meter solid, and you can keep a ruler to them so straight. It's so old, 12th century, it's the BIGGEST religious monument in the world. Took us three days, (and we don't even like temples that much) The shrines, the infinity, the moats, the delicate work with handmade tools. Sorry for the rant, but Christ the Redeemer makes world lists, and Angkor Wat doesn't. Must be about being well-known only
Looking at these I am stunned at beauty, creativity, and work that went into building them. It would be nice if we humans, as a species, would, instead of weapons, would use things like "who has the most creative buildings, whose population has their needs met, or whose country produced the most creative art" as our measuring stick for determining who is best. The headlines could be "Russia, in a bid to take back parts of the Ukrainian nation, stepped up their attack today by achieving food access for 100% of the people. The Ukraine responded with matching Russias offensive, eliminating homelessness in the last 5%, and erecting roadside waystations, allowing all travelers a free place to rest. We will wait for the Russian response".
What a fantastic though: ruling the world through doing good
Load More Replies...I wish I could’ve given many of these masterpieces multiple upvotes, they’re truly stunning
How on earth did Angkor Wat NOT made this list!? Walls 1meter solid, and you can keep a ruler to them so straight. It's so old, 12th century, it's the BIGGEST religious monument in the world. Took us three days, (and we don't even like temples that much) The shrines, the infinity, the moats, the delicate work with handmade tools. Sorry for the rant, but Christ the Redeemer makes world lists, and Angkor Wat doesn't. Must be about being well-known only