เมาป่าวนิ?? แนวสิ่งก่อสร้างหลุดโลกที่ใครเห็นก็ว่า สถาปนิก”เมาป่าวนิ”
เมาป่าวนิ?? แนวสิ่งก่อสร้างหลุดโลกที่ใครเห็นก็ว่า สถาปนิก”เมาป่าวนิ”
พาไปดูเหล้าสิ่งก่อสร้างที่ออกแบบมาแบบหลุดโลก ไม่ว่าจะเป็นรูปทรงที่ผิดหลักความจริง
รูปทรงที่บิดเบี้ยวเกินจะเป็น หรืแสร้างแบบผิดที่ผิดทาง แต่สิ่งก่อสร้างเหล่านี้การันตีน่ะครับว่า คนสร้างไม่ได้เมาแต่ประการใด
แต่มันเป็นเอกลักษณ และความต้องการของเจ้าของสิ่งก่อสร้างต่างหากที่ต้องการความโดดเด่น เราไปดูกันน๊ฮ๊าบบบ
Terfens, Austria
This upside down house was built by Polish architects Irek Glowacki and Marek Rozanski. Yup, the inside’s upside down too.
Rotterdam and Helmond, Netherlands
Called “Kubuswoningen” (Cube Houses) these homes look totally insane but are actually brilliant: balanced on a hexagonal-shaped pylon the roof of each house is tilted at 45-degrees and connected to its neighbor. The result is high-density housing that’s fun to look at.
Ganghwa Island, Korea
Malmo, Sweden
Built by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava, this twisted 54 story residential building features 147 apartments, a relax/lounge/spa, wine cellar, and around-the-clock concierge service 365 days a year. It’s called “Turning Torso” and definitely reminds me of my cat when she stretches.
South Korea
Source: dezeen.com
Source: dezeen.com
Source: wikipedia.org Co-designer Frank Gehry originally named the house Fred and Ginger (after the famous dancers Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers) because the house resembles a pair of dancers.Wolverhampton, England
Source: flickr.com This off-kilter pub was built on top of land being mined for coal. When the mine owner extracted to much, causing the ground to sink, the building got permanently crunk. “The sloping floor creates an eerie illusory sensation, making drinkers feel drunk after only a pint or two,” notes the photographer who snapped this pic.Sopot, Poland
Source: homesandhues.com Krzywy Domek means Crazy House in Polish, which is quite appropriate for a building that looks like it got stuck in a fun house mirror.Abu Dhabi
Source: wikipedia.org You might be interested that it’s this building (called Capital Gate), not the Leaning Tower of Pisa, that holds the Guinness record for world’s “furthest leaning man-made tower.”Sydney, Australia
Source: dezeen.com Another mind-bending Frank Gehry masterpiece, this building houses the Business School at Sydney’s University of Technology. The architect said he was inspired by the way that artists use folds to explore color, form and shadow. The curved forms continue inside the school, where the brick walls are finished in plasterboard.Windsor, England
Source: flickr.com According to Wikipedia, there is a secret passage in the basement, probably used for delivering produce from the market to the kitchens of Windsor Castle. Source: house-crazy.com Also, it looks this way because it was built using green wood, which does not like to stay put as it ages.Margate in Kent, UK
Source: alexchinneck.com Created by British artist and designer Alex Chinneck, this sloppy building tricks the viewer into thinking the facade of a four-story house has slid down, exposing the upper floor to the elements.Source: alexchinneck.com
Source: atlasobscura.com Remember how Dorothy’s house killed the witch? Well this little guy had bigger plans: kill a museum. Source: atlasobscura.comSan Diego, Californa
Source: ucsdnews.ucsd.edu This house (technically a sculpture) can be found dangling off the side of Jacobs Hall at the University of California San Diego. It was the 18th addition to the school’s Stuart Collection.Alberta, Canada
Source: snapshotofmylife This 25-ft tall, aluminum framed, red glass shingled “church” lives in a park in Calgary, Alberta. American sculptor Dennis Oppenheim says that “turning the church upside down makes it more aggressive, but not blasphemous.” Not everyone agreed.Source: culturekiosque.com